State Historian and Mug Up curator Katie Ringsmuth discusses the history of the Alaska Packers Association’s (Diamond NN) Cannery, located on the Naknek River in Bristol Bay, and the stories featured in the Mug Up exhibit at the Alaska State Museum.
History
Weaving with Sea Otter Fur – Kathy Rado
Kathy Rado, adopted Haida Double-fin Killerwhale wove this sea otter fur raven’s tail robe for her husband, Pedro Rado (Eagle, Killerwhale from Klukwan). Rado has been weaving in the raven’s tail style for over 30 years. Raven’s tail is a very old hand-weaving technique featuring geometric patterns that predates the more familiar Chilkat robes. The geometric style died out in the early 1800s, and today, only a dozen early robes (or fragments thereof) exist in museums around the world. In the 1980s, Rado and other weavers learned the basic technique from Cheryl Samuel and started weaving them again. Rado’s first robe, One Within Another, was based on two surviving similar fur-warp robes currently located in a museum in Russia. Currently, Rado is preparing to weave another robe with sea otter warps. Rado will share the exciting adventure of the history of the making of One Within Another Robe and how this ancient technique of weaving with sea otter came to life almost two centuries after this style of weaving died out.
A History of Native Textiles on the Northern Northwest Coast
Curator of Collections Steve Henrikson discusses the history of northern Northwest Coast Native textiles featured in The Spirit Wraps Around You exhibit at the Alaska State Museum.
Walter Harper: Alaska Native Son
Cruising the Fossil Coast Line Part II
Ray Troll joins us again with co-author Kirk Johnson to discuss the science side of their book, Cruising the Fossil Coast Line.
The Case for Tranquility Base: Proving the Apollo 11 Moon Landing
Curator Steve Henrikson helps us celebrate the moon landing anniversary with an interesting lecture on the landing and Alaska’s missing moon rocks.