This text is a part of a sequence specializing in underrepresented craft histories, researched and written by the 2024 Craft Archive Fellows, and arranged in collaboration with the Middle for Craft.
From seashell and tortoiseshell physique adornments to carving, seafaring, and tool-making, the distinctive magnificence and historical past of Chamorro craft are rooted in ideas of reciprocity and deep respect for our ancestors, the land, water, and the ocean. These practices additionally function a car to hold forth the tradition and creativity of Indigenous peoples dwelling throughout the Mariana Islands archipelago.
Early Chamorros started to interact Indigenous applied sciences to create gadgets reminiscent of baskets, hats, luggage, and ornamental items woven from palm-like pandanus leaves and coconut palm fronds. They wove fish nets known as talaya and made instruments from seashells, bone, stone, and wooden to help their existence of farming and fishing in addition to to assemble housing. Lengthy after somebody handed away, Chamorros would use their bones to craft instruments reminiscent of knives (known as se’se) and spear suggestions. Stone was used to carve grinding stones (lusong) within the preparation of natural medicines and meals, wooden was crafted into quite a lot of instruments reminiscent of handles, and shells could be remodeled into weaving instruments (si’i).
In an interview, Michael Lujan Bevacqua, a Chamorro educator, scholar, activist, creator, and curator of the Guam Museum from the Kabesa and Bittot clans of Guam and grandson of grasp blacksmith Joaquin Flores Lujan, shared his expertise rising up in a household identified for the tradition’s craft and instruments. The Chamorros’ relationship to the ocean, he says, is each fascinating and tragic. Centuries in the past, they developed subtle seafaring vessels and a formidable navigational system that relied on the celestial world. In pre-colonial society, canoes had been the primary mode of transportation between islands throughout the archipelago and for fishing in deeper waters.
Michael Bevacqua and his grandfather (photograph courtesy Michael Bevacqua)
“Back in the day, you had to have a strong connection and deep knowledge of the elements,” he mentioned, noting that data just isn’t at all times handed down in the identical methods it was earlier than colonization. “And so that’s a part of the tragedy.” However a wonderful half about craft is that it helps individuals “make a reconnection to the ocean, giving value to ourselves and Chamorro things again.” Whereas crafting and sporting a shell necklace doesn’t essentially imply one has a deep relationship with the ocean, he suggests, it has the potential to deliver you nearer.
The islands of the Mariana archipelago, which Chamorros name house, have an advanced political historical past. They had been colonized by Spain, Japan, Germany, and the USA at numerous factors in historical past, resulting in the introduction of various supplies throughout time, in addition to restrictions on cultural practices together with the Indigenous language.
In 1668, missionaries from Spain started their colonization of the Marianas islands, instigating main social adjustments. Spaniards set fireplace to the Chamorro’s conventional canoes as punishment for resisting colonization. Chamorros weren’t allowed to sail within the deep ocean or go on this information, and the observe of canoe-building nearly disappeared.
A younger Chamorro boy carries a stack of tuhong (hats) woven from coconut fibers (picture courtesy the Guam Museum)
Through the 1600s, colonial applied sciences started to be built-in into Chamorro craft. Objects initially constructed from shell or stone, as an illustration, began being made with steel, together with the kamyu, a software with carved enamel used to grate coconut. Colonizers additionally restricted the kinds of jewellery and physique adornments worn by the Indigenous inhabitants. Spondylus beads, which had been treasured to Chamorro ladies previous to colonization, as an illustration, grew to become much less prevalent. By the late 1700s and early 1800s, the one unprohibited type of expression, spiritual devotion, and physique adornment was the crucifix.
Colonization additionally led to new kinds of Chamorro craft. An essential second on this historical past was the introduction of steel and different “junk” supplies by the Spanish. Throughout this period, craft instruments had been made largely from salvage supplies. “You couldn’t harvest iron on the island,” Bevacqua mentioned, “so you basically took pieces of discarded things and then you would reform them to make tools.”
Within the twentieth century, the USA Navy got here to Guam, and circuits of importation and entry to markets utterly modified for residents. New supplies had been launched via the importing of automobiles and navy {hardware}, and Chamorros started recycling such supplies to specific themselves. When vacationers started to go to, the observe of craft additionally expanded and advanced into memento objects. “All these people who used to farm and trade and barter for their lives and create things themselves suddenly are all about buying things,” Bevacqua says, declaring that it was a method to survive. “Money is now mediating everything.”
Poster for Micronesian Schooling and Solidarity Convention in 1982 (photograph by Olivia Quintanilla; courtesy Micronesian Space Analysis Middle Archives)
World Struggle II was a tipping level in Chamorro historical past: Many had been displaced from the land because of the building of American navy bases. “A lot of people were shocked from the war,” Bevacqua mentioned, “and looking to a new future.” At that time, Chamorro tradition shifted towards changing into extra Americanized. The craft suffered, as a result of there was now not a perceived worth to it.
Through the Seventies and Nineteen Eighties, nonetheless, there was a renaissance: Craft gained a complete new sense of life and identification, resulting in a sense, Bevacqua says, “that Chamorros do not need to disappear.” It was throughout this time that Chamorros began to have a look at symbols otherwise. Bevacqua recommended the instance of a latte, or a stone pillar: That was a logo that will not be worn as a necklace within the late ‘60s and ‘70s except perhaps by someone with radical taste. By the ‘80s, however, it’s turn into a type of expression and a strong image.
Such symbols stay highly effective forces in Chamorro tradition immediately, connecting modern members to a disjointed previous, even when a few of them have very totally different significations immediately. Certainly, Chamorro craft-making, -wearing, and -using visibly assert the idea that our ancestors’ methods have a spot in our fashionable world. It’s a motion that re-infuses worth into that which colonization deemed unimportant. At the moment, we proceed to push again towards those self same concepts our ancestors negotiated over centuries.
A Chamorro household weaves akaleha or snail shell purses in postwar Guam (photograph courtesy Guam Museum)
A comparability of a Sinahi artifact to a up to date model (photograph courtesy Michael Bevacqua)
Hima carvings of shells (picture courtesy Guam Museum)
Pre-latte pottery sherd (picture courtesy Guam Museum)
Pre-latte pottery sherd (picture courtesy Guam Museum)