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(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Basket (probably Tlingit)
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

Basket (probably Tlingit)

basket weaver
Date19th century
MediumSpruce root and bear grass
Dimensions26 x 25.4 cm (10 1/4 x 10 in.)
ClassificationsVessels
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberU25n11
eMuseum ID728027
Previous NumberXU7
Original NumberF25n13.1
EmbARK ObjectID15563
TMS Source ID4107
Last Updated10/12/24
Status
Not on view
Web Commentary
This basket was made by a Northwest Coast Indigenous North American weaver from the Tlingit tribe of southeast Alaska. Tlingit spruce root baskets often use bold, geometric shapes and warm colors, which have likely faded over time in this example. The designs represent patterns observed in nature, like the wave decoration on this basket.

Tlingit weavers began making baskets for sale in the late 1700s and the tourist market flourished with the introduction of steamships to Alaska in the 1880s. It is possible Isabella purchased this basket—along with one in the Macknight Room— on her trip across America with stops in San Francisco, Salt Lake City, and Denver in 1881, or it may have been a gift. She displayed it by the desk in the Veronese Room, along with other objects of personal significance.

BibliographyNotesEllen Promise, "Searching for Answers: Isabella's Native American Basket," Inside the Collection (blog), 2 October 2023, https://www.gardnermuseum.org/blog/searching-answers-isabellas-native-american-basket
ProvenanceNotesPossibly purchased by Isabella Stewart Gardner during her travels through the American West in 1881.