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Indigenizing the home: Winnipeg designers draw from Anishinaabe culture, language to create modern home decor

After failing to find items that reflected their identities, Anishinaabe business owners in Winnipeg have taken it upon themselves to create the modern home goods they were looking for.

'It's time to start sharing our own narrative,' interior designer says

A woman standing in a field is pictured.
After realizing there weren't many options for locally-made, Indigenous-inspired fabrics in Manitoba, interior designer Destiny Seymour decided to make them herself. (Ella Greyeyes)

After failing to find items that reflected their identities, Anishinaabe designers in Winnipeg have taken it upon themselves to create the modern home goods they were looking for.

"It's time to start sharing our own narrative, and making sure that it's told correctly and by the right people," Destiny Seymour, founder of Indigo Arrows, told CBC.

The interior designer has worked at an architectural firm in Winnipeg for over a decade, noticing a lack of options for home goods made by Indigenous people in the province.

"I couldn't find textiles and productsthat represented local Indigenous people and culture from this territory in Manitoba," she said, adding that the home decor she did findrepresented Indigenous nations from British Columbia and thesouthwestern United States.

"I wanted fabrics that I could put onto furniturethat was from here, and they didn't exist, so I started making them on my own. That's how Indigo Arrowsstarted."

Seymour creates items such as linens, quilts and tea towels with unique patterns that originate from ancient pottery and bone tools made in the province. She gained the inspiration from the Manitoba Museum's stored collection of Anishinaabe pottery from the region.

"It's basically like our early home decor," she said.

Many of the patterns in her work have been given names in Anishinaabemowin, which was done in collaboration with her father Valdie,elder-in-residence at the University of Manitoba's faculty of architecture.

"I really admire her and the work that she does," Valdie told CBC.

An elderly Indigenous man is pictured in a field with pillows using unique designs.
Valdie Seymour, elder-in-residence at the University of Manitoba's faculty of architecture, helps his daughter to name her pieces in Anishinaabemowin. (Submitted by Destiny Seymour)

Anishinaabemowin words have creation stories behind them, he said, and it's exciting to watch his daughter share the language through her work. "Each of her products that she names in our language can actually be a teaching."

Her productshave acted as teaching tools since Seymour shares the stories behind the patterns in her work, and she said non-Indigenous people have been curious to know and appreciate the history behind each pattern.

"They'll order my fabrics or my products using our language and it does make me feel really proud," she said. "They're speaking Anishinaabemowin without really knowing it."

Seymour is glad she took the risk in starting her business back in 2016. Her products often sell out quickly, and she is just beginning to keep up with orders.

"I'm just very grateful that I did take the chance and start this company, because it keeps me very busy."

Prints create inclusive spaces

Jenna Valiquette was moving into a new apartment last yearand trying to spruce up her workspace as a youth facilitatorwhen she also noticed a lack of modern, Indigenous home goods in Manitoba.

"I wanted to find something that was Indigenous and included culture, language and all of the teachings that I thought were so imperative for my youth," she told CBC. "But also something that was trendy, minimalist."

A woman sitting at a homemade craft table is pictured.
Eagle Woman Prints founder Jenna Valiquette taught herself graphic design after realizing there weren't many options for trendy and minimalist Indigenous prints. (Submitted by Jenna Valiquette)

Finding only traditional or protest art things she already had on her walls Valiquette took it upon herself to create what she was looking for and learned graphic design through YouTube videos.

The member of Poplar River First Nation started her own business last October, Eagle Woman Prints, creating contemporary art prints based in her Ojibwayculture and language.

One of her most popularprints includes the Anishinaabemowinphrasemino bimaadiziwin, which refers to the Ojibwayconcept of "the good life."

An art print is shown.
One of Valiquette's most popular prints, mino bimaadiziwin, refers to the Ojibwe concept of 'the good life.' (Submitted by Jenna Valiquette)

Response to the prints have been so good that Valiquette was able to quit her second job. She said numerous educators have purchased her prints to make their classrooms more inclusive.

"I didn't set out to make this art for anyone else but myself, but the fact that it's impacting other people it's been so cool."

Brittany Grisdale, a member of Brokenhead Ojibway Nation,didn't feel that the places she grew up in reflected her heritage.

"I didn't see a lot of my Indigenous identity within the spaces that I was in," she told CBC.

A woman standing at a crafts table is pictured.
Grisdale's customers often remark that they're happy to find home goodswhich represent them and their Indigenous pride, she said. (Submitted by Brittany Grisdale)

Grisdale's business, Black WolfDog Productions, was created alongside her older brother Russell.Together, they handcraftIndigenous designs for the home and office, incorporating a passion for language revitalization, ceremony and activism.

Their doormats featurephrases likebiindigen, which is Anishinaabemowin for "come in," andawas,a saying which means "go away" in Ininimowin.

Grisdalesaid they haveexpanded beyond doormats to makeother items such as tapestry, water bottles and medicine containers, which display messages like "Every Child Matters" and "This is Indigenous land."

She said slang is also akey aspect of their work. "We think humour is such an important teaching within the community and within our culture."

A doormat with the word 'biindigen' is painted on it.
Grisdale's doormats featurephrases likebiindigen, which is Anishinaabemowin for 'come in.' (Submitted by Brittany Grisdale)

There's not enough Indigenized home decor being created locally, she said, and customers often remark that they're happy to find home goodswhich represent them and their Indigenous pride.

But Grisdale said her businessmeansmore than making sales, and it'salso aboutthe issues she's raisingawareness of and the conversations that her pieces inspire.

"I hope that I'm able to make someone feel good about their identity."