Alaska Native art sales down in Juneau
by Jonathan Grass / Juneau Empire
Aug 22, 2010 | 1507 views | 7 7 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
JUNEAU, Alaska - Selling Alaska Native art is a big draw downtown, but some shopkeepers and artists say stocking it on the shelves isn't as easy as it used to be.

"The economy is forcing us to get away from the Native items," said David Mende, owner of Northern Treasures in downtown.

He said it's mostly a matter of money in that it costs a lot for shops to get the merchandise and too much for customers to spend.

"Native items can be 10 to 15 times more expensive. It can be too much for the average customer to spend," he said, citing an example of totem poles he sells. The one made in Indonesia costs $44 while the Native-carved pole approached $500.

He noted the Indonesian one was actually designed by a Native who approved it to be manufactured overseas. Mende said this is not uncommon, as it can be cheaper to make that way.

Mende said Native works can cost so much partly because they're specialized items and take a long time to make, and this cost forces shops to look outside the area or even outside the country. He said such vendors and wholesalers can usually make and sell artwork at cheaper prices.

Declining Native inventories are felt by the artists as much as the sellers.

One such artist is Mick Beasley. He said tight economic times are forcing many places to turn to foreign vendors rather than Native artists themselves. He said it's a trend that seems to go up each year.

"The bottom line is it hurts the Native market," Beasley said, adding, "I think there's more knockoffs in the stores than ever."

He said he's seen a lot of art in downtown that comes from several countries. He said ones from Canada have a strong presence.

Beasley cited a lack of protection of intellectual property rights as a big problem affecting artists' abilities to compete with outside vendors. He said this can also lead to misrepresentation of art.

"It's all about intellectual property rights. More Natives need to receive protection," he said.

Mende pointed out the heavier tolls the economy has placed on stores that deal either mostly or exclusively with Native art. He cited the now-defunct Raven's Journey as an example.

"There's only a few of us left," he said.

Mende said adding to the problem is that ads on cruise ships are geared toward jewelers, which can hurt craft sellers. He said this wasn't always the case, as things like carvings were advertised more in the 1990s.

Beasley said the tight market for Native artists is also causing many to undercut each other and avoid helping each other. He believes this is the wrong approach for Native Alaskans.

"We need some mentor programs for Native artists. There's just not a lot," he said.

Comments
(7)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
AlaskaBorn
|
August 23, 2010
You can find some of the Indosian knock-offs here in Fairbanks. I've seen one of the vendors in Pioneer Park selling some of this junk.
Buick-Mackane
|
August 23, 2010
Juneau merchants are notorious enough for passing off foreign stuff as Alaskan Native art that agents consistently have to monitor it. Read past articles from the Juneau Empire. Google 'Chupak', tourist scams native art Juneau, etc. It's a big enough problem down there.
41yrsinFbxandlovingIt
|
August 23, 2010
I've always agreed that the capitol needs to be accessible to all Alaskans. But can you imagine the mess it would make on the already overburdened Wasilla area roads? This issue had been voted down again and again.

I'd never spend money on a knockoff of native art, either its the real thing or I'm not buying.
AlaskaBorn
|
August 23, 2010
LostAlaskan is once again lost. Kingfisher was rebutting Wisechief. It happens on forums. Exchange of ideas and opinions and all that.

Wisechief, Mick Beasley is a prominent Tlingit artist (a Northwest Coast tribe). The tourists that buy a lot of Tlingit art don’t visit Juneau because it’s the capital, and this article has nothing to do with how Juneau treats natives. Your argument to move the capital fails on at least two points.

Would you tell Mick, who has thousands of years of family history in SE Alaska, to move too?

LostAlaskan99712
|
August 23, 2010
Why shouldn't wisechief be allowed to express his opinions, kingfisher?

(Should he just keep his mouth shut and his head down?)

KingFisher907
|
August 23, 2010
wisechief- only you could turn a story about a poor economy into a racial issue LMAO @ YOU!!! those dang 'juneau people' treating the natives poorly again eh?

yesss move the capital, everything will be better then *rolls eyes*
Wisechief
|
August 22, 2010
Quit complaining and move the stores, closer to our main populated Alaskans in the interior! This just shows how Juneau people are toward the native people. For this very reason, we need to move our capital to the interior! In the past the enchoarchments wanted, to control us from overseas, now that must change! Move our capital back to the interior, where we would all have a voice!
Newsminer.com encourages a lively exchange of ideas regarding topics in the news. Users are solely responsible for the content. Comments are not pre-approved by News-Miner staff. Please keep it clean, respect others and use the 'report abuse' link when necessary. Read our full user's agreement.