Folk Art Fish Decoys
Editorial Reviews
From Independent Publisher
Fish decoys were an American innovation. While ducks and other birds migrated during cold weather, fish provided a source of food year-round for early immigrants and later for sportsmen. In summer, fish were speared from the shore or canoes; during winter months, fishers used holes cut in lake ice. In either case, decoys were raised and lowered into the water to attract prey within spearing range. Most fish decoys found today were produced in the 1930's Depression when Americans had to struggle to put food on the table. Donald J. Petersen has given us a beautiful book about collectors and collecting, spear fishing, equipment and supplies. Wisely, he ropes in the reader with an extraordinarily exuberant opening essay, "Dark House" that originally appeared in Sigurd F. Olson's Wilderness Days, about a father and son ice fishing on the Minnesota-Ontario border country in mid-winter. The son wanted to sit in a dark house with his father and watch the circling decoys and the scene below the ice. He longed for the taste of a fish fresh from the icy water of the lakes. Father and son used a tiny tarpaper shack a friend had set up with a spear and a wooden decoy. The fishermen were to bring back a fish for the friend. "That meant we had to bring back two." The father describes how he played the decoy, "a six inch model of a sucker minnow replete with fins and tail of shining tin." Whittled from a piece of cedar, its tail was set so that with "each motion of my hand it made wide, beautiful circles all around the hole." The sense of triumph in this essay makes us want to brave the cold and go ice fishing just to exit into "the brilliant dazzle of sunlight on snow...shouting, laughing at our good fortune, pounding each other on the back." Just within the last 20 years, spear fishing decoys have become highly desirable collectibles, achieving the status of folk art. Petersen, through personal lively interviews, introduces the reader to the histories of early twentieth century and contemporary decoy makers of Minnesota, one of six states where spear fishing is permitted. Included is a photo of a typical "Dark House" and detailed floor plans. He devotes a chapter to "Spear Fishing Techniques and the Construction of Spear Fishing Decoys." Schiffer Publishing specializes in great books about decoys, covering many areas of the nation. This one is a treasure.
Book Description
With over 500 color photographs, this thorough text introduces the reader to the wide variety of decoys currently available, decoys made earlier in the century by "old time" artists as well as examples of contemporary design. The construction and special attributes of fishing decoys are discussed in detail, information vital to recognising the most collectible decoys. Detailed histories of early twentieth century and contemporary decoy makers of Minnesota and their decoys has been compiled through personal interviews with the makers or their families. Information is also provided on spear makers and the varying designs of their spears, jigging sticks, and decoy boxes. This is a truly valuable reference work.
Folk Art Fish Decoys
Folk Art Fish Decoys,Donald J. Petersen,Schiffer Publishing,0764300539,Carving,Collectors and collecting,Crafts & Hobbies,Crafts / Hobbies,Equipment and supplies,Fish decoys,Fishing Sports,Folk Arts,Hobbies/Crafts,Spear fishing,Woodwork - Decoys,Decorative arts & crafts,Fishing, angling,Handicrafts,Oriental art
Book Contents:
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