
| IN MEMORIAM: | (1920-1998) |
"The elegant forms to be found in the artwork of the northwest coast
peoples, both past and present, derive to a great extent from their
maritime orientation.... Whether they were the bird-headed boats of the
west coast of Vancouver Island with their clipper-ship bows, or the more
dynamically designed northern canoes with long, ranking prows and high
sterns, they were among the most beautiful craft that maritime man has
ever devised."
"The Haida canoe is as beautifully designed and decorated an open boat
as the world has ever seen."
The canoe had more significance to the Haida than just a mode of
transportation; it was the means for the social interaction and ceremony
that was at the core of Haida culture. Canoe building had been an
important and profitable business for the Haida before the arrival of
white men. Their canoes were in demand and could be traded for goods
produced by other of the west coast peoples. After gasoline-powered boats
were introduced to the residents of the Queen Charlotte Islands, in the
early twentieth century, the traditional Haida seagoing canoes were
burned or left to rot.
The project to construct Lootaas for a display at Expo 86 of
vessels from around the world was commissioned by the Bank of British
Columbia. Designed by Reid and created under his supervision by young
carvers of Skidegate, the canoe was one of his most challenging and
absorbing ventures. But after its completion Reid considered it the
greatest of his accomplishments.
He preceded it a 7.5 metre inshore canoe (itself based on a 2.5 metre
canoe he created as model), as a means of gaining technical experience;
it was fashioned after a canoe in the collection of the UBC Museum of
Anthropology. This first canoe was launched in Vancouver's False Creek
in October 1985, and met Reid's expectations in terms of appearance and
functionality. Work had already begun on the full-size ocean-going
canoe; Lootaas was constructed at Skidegate and had its trial run
there in April 1986. Bow and stern were decorated with a Killer Whale
design -- hence the canoe's name, "Loo Taas" meaning "Wave Eater".
Both the larger and the smaller canoes were put on display at Expo 86.
The following summer Lootaas was paddled back to Skidegate -- the
600-mile voyage being something of a pilgrimage, since it followed old
routes the Haida had used in trading ventures. Haida chiefs, elders and
others stood on the beach in front of the village -- a beach that a
century and a half earlier would have been covered with canoes -- to
witness an event few alive had seen before. They officially
welcomed Lootaas,
the first new canoe in the traditional style to come ashore there that
century. In 1989 Haida paddlers took Lootaas
up the Seine from the sea to Paris, to be included among other of Bill
Reid's works in an exhibition at the Museum of Man.
Reid's achievement went beyond creating a single canoe to fulfilling his
original hope: the interest he had generated prompted other Haida
craftsmen to turn their hand to canoe-building.
Appropriately, it was in Lootaas that his ashes were carried to
Tanu, to be scattered on the soil of his mother's ancestral village.
Bill Reid, canoe-builder
Bill Reid from "Lootaas, 'wave-eater', The Voyage
Home", (unpublished), June 1987
Bill Reid, quoted in Moire Johnston, "Homeland of the
Haida," National Geographic, July 1987, p.109
Reid's grandfather, Charles Gladstone, had been a fisherman, a carpenter,
and an expert boat-builder -- a skill which increased the respect Reid
had for him. This no doubt helped foster Reid's awe for the traditional
Haida sea-going canoe, as an object combining functional perfection and
visual elegance. He believed that the
canoe
was the single most important artifact used by the peoples of the
Northwest coast and that the challenge of extracting the form of a canoe
from a giant cedar played a key role in the evolution of Northwest Coast
art. He was fascinated by one of the two
surviving nineteenth century canoes,
preserved in the National Museum of Man -- not least because Edenshaw
had decorated it -- but deplored the fact that it was not on public display
(something rectified when the museum moved to a new home as the Canadian
Museum of Civilization). Although the knowledge of how to build such
canoes had not been handed down to his own generation, he believed he
could piece it back together from books, study of the old canoes, and
above all from hands-on experience.
Expo 86 in Vancouver coincided with the obsession Bill Reid had developed
for understanding the Haida canoe as a paradigm of Haida culture. Its
pivotal role had been recognized by the Reverend William Collison, who
titled his reminiscences of the first mission to the Haida "In the Wake
of the War Canoe". Reid was commissioned to carve and paint a
15 metre war canoe from a red cedar log for the world's fair. He later
agreed to recreate this canoe, which he named
Lootaas, for the
Canadian Museum of Civilization in fibreglass (to combat fluctuations in
climactic conditions). Each new canoe was to be the alter ego of the
other: one was to have primary formlines in black, the other in red.
Consequently, one canoe became known as
Black Eagle
while the other was known as
Red Raven.
