Thursday, March 3, 2011

Wesakechak and the Origin of the Moon Illustration

Hey everyone, here is a painting I did for my Illustration class. It was an assignment to create a children's storybook page. This one is 11" by 18". It is done with Gouache paint on illustration board. It was inspired by a Cree legend about the Origin of the moon. The legend is written below.

 

The Origin of the Moon

A long time ago, there was no moon. There was only the sun. The Creator had messengers who helped him in his work. One of these was the Caretaker of the Sun. He had two children, a boy and a girl. All three lived in the Sky World. They were very happy.
The daughter looked after the camp. She kept it clean and tidy. When she shook the feather bedding, the feathers would fall to the earth as snow. The son hunted and fished. When he hung his nets to dry, droplets fell to earth as rain. The father would be away. All day he kept the great fire, burning on the sun. He was very old. Soon he would leave his children, never to return. He said to them, "When I die, you must keep the fire burning, or else the people and animals on earth will die."
One day when the fire was low on the sun, the father came home tired. He said, "Children, my children, my children. I have to go. I will never return." The children cried and mourned. They knew he would die.
In the morning, it was time to start the sun's fire. The children began to quarrel over who would do the task. "I will tend
the fire, I am older," said the sister. "No, I am the man, I will do it," said the brother. They yelled thus to each other.
The people on earth began to worry, saying, "Why is the sun so late? It should be up by now!" Wesakechak went to the sun to see what was the matter. When he arrived, the boy and his sister were still quarreling. Wesakechak was angry. "The People and animals will perish," he said to them. "It is up to you! You keep the fire burning," he told the boy. "Your name from now on will be Pisim." To the sister he said, "You, too, will work as hard as your brother. You will keep the fire in another place. You will work at night. You will be Tipiskawipisim, the Moon. The two of you did not get along. As a punishment, you will see each other once a year. For all time, you will see each other from across the sky." And so it happened. Even now it is so.

10 comments:

Alexa🐺Penn said...

That is a really good painting - a true Native American mind picture. . . Like to see more :}

And many thanks for the Legend of the Moon and the Sun.

Anonymous said...

I like this Native American myth. However, being someone who knows nothing about Cree folktales the character of Wesakechak was confusing. I had to Goggle the name to learn who he is in the story. Overall, it was a pretty good creation story.

Anonymous said...

Wow what a sacrifice he was a brave man if anything it’s like juesus he died for our sins it’s so sad but he’s in a better place 😭 anyway that was like that he put a fire was he going to burn him cause he said I wouldn’t be here so surely he will die and that was one good story and they didn’t have a sun that’s cold that means that though

Unknown said...

good job:}

Anonymous said...

This story is okay I guess I didn't learn a lot from this. I would give this a 2.5 out of 5

Anonymous said...

This story is okay I guess I didn't learn a lot from this. I would give this a 2.5 out of 5

Unknown said...

I am a First Nations person, and I love that story, I am a teacher for middle years and I always try to fit the legends into real life, so that my students understand the moral behind the story. I will also add a Cree word with it, I am using this one with February which represents Valentines Day - (Love) = Sakihtowin. I teach them Cree at the same time.

Unknown said...

I am a First Nations person, and I love that story, I am a teacher for middle years and I always try to fit the legends into real life, so that my students understand the moral behind the story. I will also add a Cree word with it, I am using this one with February which represents Valentines Day - (Love) = Sakihtowin. I teach them Cree at the same time.

Unknown said...

I enjoy all Native Legends, I am a teacher and I usually use the legends to teach my students about the real teaching of the legend, the moral of the story. I am teaching them about Sakihtowin-(Love) since it's February and I teach them a Cree word too.

Jerry Thomson said...

Nice post