Worksheet

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FoodShelter.html.zip

Food & Shelter.html

What do humans need to survive? What kind of objects have humans created to help them survive? What is the relationship between art and basic human survival?  

  • FOOD 
    • The procurement of food remains essential to our survival; however, how we serve food to our family, clan, or tribe conveys ideas of who we are and where we came from.  For example, American Indian/Canadian Aboriginal tribes, such as the Haida, Tlingit, Kwakwaka'wakw, and many other tribes of the Pacific Northwest, hold yearly Potlatch ceremonial feasts during which the host gives away or destroys items to display their wealth and perhaps gain further prestige within the tribe.  
    • Food is served in extravagantly carved Potlatch feast bowls generally depicting the clan and moiety of the host family, such as the Beaver Feast Bowl pictured below.  The bowls remind the guests who the host is and to be thankful for their generosity.
      • Image result for potlatch feast bowl 
    • In contemporary society, food and art is all the rage and has taken over our lives! 
      • First, look at all the chef/cooking shows on TV & how they emphasize plating skills = we eat with our eyes first!  If it looks good, chances are, it's delicious.  If it doesn't look appetizing, we may probably won't take the chance to find out if it's yummy or not. 
        • Which dish would you rather eat?
        • Image result for excellent food presentation  Image result for disgusting food presentation
  • What does sharing what we eat, where we eat it, and who we eat it with say about us? 
    • Image result for foodies instagram  
    •  Image result for foodies instagram pic examples Image result for foodies instagram pic examples

  • SHELTER: Potlatches are/were generally held in clan houses, which are/were decorated with elaborately carved crest poles (depicts the clan/moiety lineage), such as the examples below of a Haida clan meeting house:
      • Image result for clan house pacific northwest Related image

  • The ways in which our homes are constructed is also paramount to the theme of Shelter.  Since 1972 New Mexico architect Mike Reynolds has been constructing Earthship Biotectures, which are sustainable houses made from only recycled materials, such as tires, beer cans, soda bottles, and soil.  There's a 2007 documentary about his movement, Garbage Warrior, which I highly recommend.  There's also a short BuzzFeed video: 
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