Salmon bones inspire wearable art, new museum piece
December 1, 2017
Theresa Bakker
907-474-6941
Artists need materials, whether they鈥檙e a pile of canvases, cups full of pencils or stacks of fabric. These supplies might be central to the success of an artwork, but they are chosen for a wide variety of reasons. They could even be a bucket of bones.
For Sitka artist Cynthia Gibson, the sight of a fish carcass and a glimpse of its curved backbone on a local beach sparked a vision she carried with her for years.
鈥淭he simple lines of the bone in its natural setting were beautiful to me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 have been using salmon bones for years to embellish corsets and create earrings and other jewelry. Even a flapper dress where the fringe was made up with mostly salmon bones.鈥
Then she decided to make a dress entirely out of bones. The positive feedback from her other experiences, coupled with a desire to challenge herself, led to a unique idea that would take her more than four years to finish. The result is a dress that is now part of the permanent collection at the University of 蜜桃影像 Museum of the North.
Fashion statement
Fashion from the 1920s has always been a passion, but Gibson knew she wanted a dress that would elicit that vibe while mimicking the shape of the salmon vertebra she fell in love with on the beach. 鈥淲ith a natural hole in each bone from the spinal cord, stringing them together was easy.鈥
She just had to get them as white as possible.
That meant gathering bones from the beach and from others willing to donate. Then sorting and sanding and cleaning and bleaching. Each tiny bead had to be perfect so it could be attached to a little black dress she purchased at a thrift store. She spent hours threading those bones, approximately 20,000 of them altogether.
Through trial and error, she strung and sewed and re-sewed many strands. Toward the end of her process, Gibson stopped cooking for her family, snacking in the work space that took up the entire dining room table instead. Her daughter and husband had to fend for themselves, eating frozen pizza and bowls of cereal on the couch.
One memory has her sitting at the table in sweats, hair pulled back into a ponytail, stringing bones and eating from a dry bowl of granola. 鈥淭hey both looked at me with big eyes and asked if I was eating the bones! The funny part is that I did almost eat one a few times, my fingers dipping into the bowl of bones next to my granola snack,鈥 she said.
Gibson said 蜜桃影像ns are passionate about wild salmon. It鈥檚 a way of life and a livelihood for many generations. And wild salmon stocks are good for the environment. 鈥淭o my surprise, the dress ended up creating a bridge between art and community. It鈥檚 exciting that so many people are inspired by it and that it has a life that doesn鈥檛 include a box in my attic.鈥
Historical reference
Angela Linn, the senior collections manager of ethnology and history at the University of 蜜桃影像 Museum of the North, thought the dress was special enough to warrant applying for a Rasmuson Foundation Art Acquisition Grant. This program managed by Museums 蜜桃影像 is the only source of funding available to the museum for purchasing contemporary cultural items.
鈥淚t allows us to collect in a timely way the modern aesthetic expressions of 蜜桃影像's living artists,鈥 Linn said. 鈥淲ithout this program, we would have to find a donor willing to purchase the dress and donate it to the museum. This takes a lot of work, especially when your museum has competing needs for fundraising.鈥
Linn said the piece itself is of interest for several reasons. It is a beautiful and compelling interpretation of the importance of salmon to the state. It also communicates a clear sense of place for a resident artist of Southeast 蜜桃影像. And as a piece of wearable art, Linn said it fills a hole in the collections plan for the museum鈥檚 ethnology and history department, which seeks to represent the experiences of both indigenous people and non-Native residents.
鈥淥ur institutional mission guides us to collect items to understand local and global concerns. The story of salmon in 蜜桃影像 as conveyed by this dress has many such implications. While we have a sizable number of formal evening gowns, we currently have no examples of wearable art in the history collection, though the ethnological collection includes many examples of what could be considered wearable art in the form of traditional skin-sewn garments.鈥
The dress in the press
Although the dress was not selected for its intended destination, the World of Wearable Art Show in New Zealand 鈥 the largest wearable art show in the world 鈥 Gibson was glad for the opportunity to refine her creation. 鈥淚 was determined to make the dress as perfect as possible because it was starting to get legs.鈥
First, a photographer from the Salmon Project shared photos on social media. Then the dress made a trip to the Lower 48, for a temporary exhibit at the Coos Art Museum in Coos Bay, Oregon. And then the reporters started to call.
Cosmopolitan Magazine and the online site Salon commended the artist for her imagination and use of unconventional materials. One writer said, 鈥淐ynthia Gibson is a name we hope to hear more from very soon. That鈥檚 because the Sitka, 蜜桃影像, artist just created one of the most memorable avant-garde dresses of 2017.鈥
The review went on to praise her for taking the most revered fish in 蜜桃影像 and turning it into revolutionary fashion.
鈥淚 hope that people who see the dress will be inspired and that it will help them open their eyes to limiting beliefs,鈥 Gibson said. 鈥淚 hope it challenges them to try something audacious and outlandish. I also hope that people appreciate the simple beauty of a salmon vertebrae and that they are able to look at the natural world with more appreciation of using the things we think of as trash.鈥
Though visitors to the museum might be surprised at the creative use of dead salmon in its newest acquisition, the real shock might be in learning what Gibson does for a living. She鈥檚 a financial advisor, a numbers person. And while she says most people don鈥檛 think of the financial arts as a creative endeavor, the skill is a necessary one.
鈥淎lbert Einstein said the greatest skill was creativity, which enables you to find new solutions to old problems,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 feel it helps me to notice detail. I am constantly collecting a jumbled mess and creating order out of it, whether I'm creating a financial plan or a salmon bone dress.鈥