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Alberta
Guide to Indian Country Page 9
The good news for Native artists and craftsmen is that the interest in
purchasing indigenous art is at an all-time high.
What may tarnish that soaring star and drag it back to earth is the
proliferation of copycat items on the market that undercut prices by 40
per cent or more.
Associated Press reports this has happened in Seattle, Wash. There, a
wholesaler sold Phillippines-made reproductions--complete with phoney
signature--of model totem poles crafted by Makah carver, Stacy Raub.
Raub successfully sued, but the problem is bigger than just one artist,
U.S. Federal Trade Commission spokeswoman Eleanor Durham says.
I'm not so sure we've seen quite this volume of really pricey stuff"
counterfeited before, Durham said about a recent case.
To complicate matters further for the consumer, there is a long list of
associated problems cited by retailers. For example, there are
wholesalers who do not guarantee either the authenticity or the place of
origin of goods. Then there are some Native people who manufacture or
sell Native-made items alongside mass-produced items from foreign
countries in a setting, such as a powwow, that implies the goods sold
are made by Indians.
Only in the areas of Inuit sculpture and original paintings by
established Native artist does there seem to be some protection afforded
the consumer. That protection lies in the reputation of the museum or
art gallery. Other than that, there is just the Copy-right Act,
retailers say.
"Today, most Inuit art is marketed through collectives, which
authenticate the work and affix an "igloo" tag prior to sale. Reputable
galleries and shops generally will say they only purchase items so
tagged. In the case of paintings done by Indians, they buy from people
they know, or whose work they can validate.
But even at the retail level, differences of opinion exist about what
constitutes a rip-off, of the extent of the problem of rip-offs.
Agnes Bugera, owner of the Bearclaw Gallery in Edmonton, says that in
her experience, Native carvings or paintings "have not been a problem."
"We buy very little from mass-produced things," Bugera adds, "so we
never come across (counterfeit carvings)."
At the Fort Door in Edmonton, proprietor of "Canadian Native and Inuit
Products" Tom Sawchuk says he does think foreign reproductions are a
problem, and his first concern is to buy Canadian . "I don't want to do
Third World stuff or things that are copied by other countries--I simply
don't handle it."
Sawchuk scoffs at the suggestion put forth by some retailers that there
is a dearth of genuine Indian art for sale, therefore, they have to
offer mass-produced items.
But his explanation is ambiguous "I don't think so. There's an
over-abundance of things to buy and an over-abundance of things to buy
and an over-abundance to artists..but a person is fussy and I'm fussy
and that's what I'm finding. Nice things are hard to find."
As long as it is Canadian-made, Sawchuk will consider purchasing
Native-style art from anyone, including non-Natives, he said.
"It doesn't matter what you are or who you are, if you're an Ojibway or
a Haida, but if you can carve Haida-style... I have a Cree guy from
Calgary that brings me masks sometimes that are Haida-style. What's
wrong with that if he has put his heart and soul into it?"
Tom McFall at the Alberta Craft Council agrees with Bugera on the value
of the igloo tag to prove an item is Inuit-made.
The high ticket items are what concern McFall.
He says that if someone from Europe is spending say $500 for a doll,
"they want to know... that it is Native-made".
McFall says that because a lot of Native people are no longer learning
how to do traditional crafts, outlets "don't have access to the real
thing." That explains why they sell the mass-produced items, he said.
Barry Ace, acting manager of the government's Indian Art Centre in
Hull, Que., cites the Internet as a new source of concern for artists.
Often, no approval i obtained for the images that go on it, so the
artist may be deprived of royalties.
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