Basket
A basket is a container which is traditionally constructed from stiff fibers, which can be made from a range of materials, including wood splints, runners, and cane. While most baskets are made from plant materials, other materials such as horsehair, baleen, or metal wire can be used. Baskets are generally woven by hand. Some baskets are fitted with a lid, others are left open.
Uses
Baskets serve utilitarian as well as aesthetic purposes. Some baskets are ceremonial, that is religious, in nature.[1] While baskets are typically used for storage and transport, specialized baskets are as sieves, for cooking, for processing seeds or grains, for tossing gambling pieces, rattles, fans, fish traps, laundry, and other uses.
History
Prior to the invention of woven baskets, people used tree bark to make simple containers. These containers could be used to transport gathered food and other items, but crumble after only a few uses. Weaving strips of bark or other plant material to support the bark containers would be the next step, followed by entirely woven baskets. The last innovation appears to be baskets so tightly woven that they could hold water.
Depending on soil conditions, baskets may or may not be preserved in the archaeological record. Sites in the Middle East show that weaving techniques were used to make mats and possibly also baskets, circa 8000 BCE. Twined baskets date back to 7000 BCE in Oasisamerica.[1] Baskets made with interwoven techniques were common at 3000 BCE. Baskets were originally designed as multi-purpose baskets to carry and store and to keep stray items about the home. The plant life available in a region affects the choice of material, which in turn influences the weaving technique. Rattan and other members of the Arecaceae or palm tree family, the thin grasses of temperate regions, and broad-leaved tropical bromeliads each require a different method of twisting and braiding to be made into a basket. The practice of basket making has evolved into an art. Artistic freedom allows basket makers a wide choice of colors, materials, sizes, patterns, and details. The carrying of a basket on the head, particularly by rural women, has long been practised. Representations of this in Ancient Greek art are called Canephorae.
Figurative and literary usage
The phrase "to hell in a handbasket" means to rapidly deteriorate. The origin of this use is unclear. "Basket" is sometimes used as an adjective towards a person who is born out of wedlock.[2] This occurs more commonly in British English. "Basket" also refers to a bulge in a man's crotch.[2]
Materials
Materials have been used by basket makers:
Gallery
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Baskets four styles
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Baskets - Danforth Museum - Framingham, MA
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A set of traditional hand woven native Indian Nuu-chah-nulth peoples' baskets (Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast of Canada)
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Baskets for sale in the island of La Réunion, east of Madagascar
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Storage basket, Pomo people, (indigenous people of California), Honolulu Museum of Art
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Trinket Basket, Makah people, Northwest Washington, late 19th to early 20th century, twined and plaited bear grass, sedge, cedar bark
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Nootka Makah baskets - Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History
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Ethiopian woman gathering coffee beans in a basket
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Seri Indian pot-shaped basket (Northern Mexico)
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Bending vines for basket construction - Pohnpei
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Inupiat basket of whale baleen with a walrus ivory finial, Barrow, Alaska
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Black ash baby basket by Odawa-Ojibwe Kelly Church, Michigan
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Yurok baskets from Redwood National Park area, California
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Traditional western Hubei baskets (China)
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Sweetgrass basket made by the Gullah culture of coastal Georgia or South Carolina, USA
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Backpack made of birch bark.
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Egyptian basket preserved in the Biblioteca Museu Víctor Balaguer, Vilanova i la Geltrú
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A woman carrying a basket full of vegetables on her head in K R Market, Bangalore, India
See also
References
- 1 2 "Hopi Basketry." Northern Arizona Native American Culture Trail. (retrieved 13 Nov 2011)
- 1 2 "basket, n.". oed.com. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
Sources
- Zepeda, Ofelia (1995). Ocean Power: Poems from the Desert. ISBN 0-8165-1541-7.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basket. |
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Basket. |
- Baskets, The Women's Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art
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