Mieko Chikappu

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Mieko Chikappu
チカップ美恵子
Born
Mieko Iga

(1948-09-09)9 September 1948
Died5 February 2010(2010-02-05) (aged 61)
Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
NationalityJapanese
Known forEmbroidery, poetry, essays, activism

Mieko Chikappu (チカップ 美恵子 Chikappu Mieko, also rendered as Chikkap or Cikap Mieko, September 9, 1948 – February 5, 2010), born Mieko Iga (伊賀 美恵子 Iga Mieko), was an Ainu embroiderer, artist, poet, essayist, and Indigenous activist.[1] She was born in the city of Kushiro on the island of Hokkaido, Japan. "Chikappu" is a rendering of the Ainu language word "cikap" (チカㇷ゚) meaning "bird."

Biography[edit]

Chikappu was born in Kushiro to an Ainu family. Her uncle was the well-known Ainu elder (ekasi) Tasuke Yamamoto. From childhood, she learned Ainu embroidery as well as the Ainu folk music called upopo from her mother, the poet Fude Iga. Her older brother, Kazuaki Yamamoto, was also an Ainu activist. As a girl, she appeared in the 1963–1964 NHK-produced documentary film series The World of the Yukar (ユーカラの世界 Yūkara no sekai).

Moving to Tokyo, she began work as a colorist for animated works. Later, in 1983, she was one of the founders of the Rera Association for the Consideration of the Present of the Ainu People (アイヌ民族の現在を考えるレラの会 Ainu minzoku no genzai o kangaeru rera no kai)—eventually renamed to the Rera Association (レラの会 Rera no kai)—an association of ethnic Ainu living in the Tokyo area, and became heavily involved in Ainu rights movements. Around this time, she also started to make a living as a well-known embroidery artist of Ainu patterns, and eventually moved to Sapporo.

Earlier, in 1969, a scholarly book called Ainu Ethnography (アイヌ民族誌 Ainu minzokushi) was published, in which a photograph of Chikappu as a young girl in Ainu clothing was used without permission with the caption describing the Ainu as a "dying race" (horobiyuku minzoku). When she learned of this, she wrote a letter of protest to the authors of the book, including the well-known Hokkaido poet Genzō Sarashina. Unsatisfied with their apology, in 1985 she filed a lawsuit against the authors and publishing company of this book for defamation and the violation of her portrait rights, a landmark case that came to be known as the "Ainu People Portrait Rights Trial" (アイヌ民族肖像権裁判 Ainu minzoku shōzōken saiban). The case was settled in 1988 with an apology to Chikappu and further conditions. The case caused a stir in Japan and started conversations regarding the state of ethnological and anthropological research on the Ainu people.

She continued to publish books and speak publicly about the dignity of the Ainu people, the establishment of their official status as an Indigenous people, and other issues from an Ainu perspective. Many of her writings centered on explaining the depth of Ainu culture, particularly embroidery. Other writings indicted modern Japan's exploitation and oppression of the Ainu. In regards to the Kuril Islands dispute, unlike the views of the dominant Ainu organization, the Hokkaido Utari Association, Chikkap and her association took the position of condemning Japan for driving the Ainu out of these "northern territories" in the 19th century and demanding their return. She was also an active participant in Peace Boat, a Japan-based non-government organization.

From April 13 to June 27, 2012, an exhibition of her works entitled "Mieko Chikappu Exhibition: From the World of Ainu Pattern Embroidery and Poetry" (Chikappu Mieko ten~Ainu mon'yō shishū to shi no sekai kara~) was held at the Kushiro Art Museum, Hokkaido in her hometown of Kushiro.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Chikappu, Mieko (2011). The World of Chikappu Mieko: Collection of Ainu Patterns and Poetry (チカップ美恵子の世界 : アイヌ文様と詩作品集 Chikappu mieko no sekai : ainu mon'yō to shisakuhinshū). Sapporo: Hokkaido shinbunsha. ISBN 9784894536135.
  2. ^ "チカップ美恵子展~アイヌ文様刺繡と詩の世界から~" (PDF).