Several types of birch trees are indigenous to North America’s Eastern Woodlands area and the Great Lakes. Nishnabé people use their wood for many different facets of everyday life, such as making canoes, wigwams, basketry, and art, including birch bark biting.
Indigenous artists keep birch bark biting alive - The Washington Post
Exhibits - Stonington Gallery
Pat Bruderer - Indigenous Arts Collective of Canada
Trenton Doyle Hancock: Skin and Bones, 20 Years of Drawing by
Aboriginal Art, Birch Bark Biting
ANGELIQUE MERASTY (1924-1996) CREE, Two Birch Bark Bitings, c
An Elephant a Day: Elephant No. 177: Birchbark Biting
SK Arts - Into the Woods
Mixed Media - PressReader
The Beauty of Birch Bark Biting
HEALING THROUGH BIRCH BARK BITING - MUSKRAT Magazine
10 Birchbark biting ideas birch bark, birch, indigenous art
An Elephant a Day: Elephant No. 177: Birchbark Biting