C Magazine

Natural fibre shopping with Renee “Wasson” Dillard at the Ojibwe Cultural Foundation, and nearby bush, M’Chigeeng First Nation, Summer 2016

“Let’s go shopping, kwe,” Wasson jokes as we pull up to the densely treed lot where M’Chigeeng First Nation’s new grocery store is slated to be built in the coming months. Seeing as the land is scheduled to be cleared, we figure no one will mind if we snap up some choice natural fibres.

On our shopping list today is basswood bark, though Wasson always keeps an eye out for healthy black ash – an increasing rarity in Michigan now that the invasive emerald ash borer (EAB) beetle has destroyed tens of millions of its ash trees. We spent about an hour driving around the rez before coming to this spot, Wasson hanging out the passenger

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from C Magazine

C Magazine11 min read
Golden Jubilee: An interview with Suneil Sanzgiri
Aamna Muzaffar: Golden Jubilee is the most recent in a set of three films you’ve made since 2019; to start off, can you tell me about the way these works are situated within your practice and, thinking about the arc of this triad, what brought these
C Magazine4 min read
“Artery” — Allison Katz
Entering the gallery-cum-consulate at Canada House is not unlike passing through airport security, the guard informs me. First, I’m required to book tickets online or by QR code, which involves several sweaty minutes on Eventbrite while standing in t
C Magazine4 min read
“The Children Have to Hear Another Story” — Alanis Obomsawin Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, 12 February to 18 April 2022
Spanning more than five decades worth of material, “The Children Have to Hear Another Story” (2022) is a comprehensive retrospective celebrating the cinematic voice of Alanis Obomsawin and the blurry lines between artist, activist, musician, and film

Related