Saturday, March 8, 2025

Art in Medicine - March 2025: Kumugwe


Wood, cedar, bark
C.a. 1900 
Portland Art Museum

The March 2025 Art In Medicine topic is about Kumugwe, from the Pacific Northwest.

Lucinda Bennett, the Medical Librarian at Ascension St Agnes Hospital in Baltimore, MD,  publishes a regular series on Art in Medicine and The Health Humanities.    

It's only 1-2 pages with gorgeous images, so it won't take you long to read

... and just might enrich your life.


Kumugwe

“In examinations of world religions, the Pacific Northwest region of the United States and Canada tends to be overlooked. This doesn’t mean, though, that its inhabitants haven’t fashioned for themselves a plethora of gods and spirits. Kumugwe, the god of health for the indigenous Kwakwaka’wakw people, is a great example of a fascinating and understudied deity ... As the god of health and wealth, Kumugwe can heal sickness and reward humans with great riches. Between his power over the oceans and his healing capabilities, Kumugwe deserves a spot among the great gods of health in global religious traditions.” (8 Gods of Healing from Around the World) 

In the United States, the history of indigenous people is not often taught in a comprehensive manner or not until later in the education system. As such, the varied beliefs and practices of Native Americans are unfamiliar to many and are often misunderstood; especially considering that said practices are still in existence and not a chapter in a history book. So for this month’s topic, we are going to look at a deity of healing who also inhabits some unexpected realms and how his presence is important to contemporary spiritual practices in the modern day. When one thinks of healing deities that tends to be the only aspect that god or goddess inhabits, but not so with Kumugwe. 

“God of the land beneath the sea, Kumugwe is associated with tremendous wealth and lives with his wife in an undersea palace made of copper planks guarded by an assortment of sea creatures. It is said that the posts of his house are living sea lions and its doors are like giant, snapping mouths, and that within the walls of his palace is hidden great treasure. If a mortal could reach the sea god’s palace alive they would return home as wealthy and powerful men, for Kumugwe can bestow not only wealth but also magical powers. He is also regarded as the adversary of the Thunderbird.” (Milwaukee Public Museum)  

Classical deities of health, such as Asclepius, are more commonly recognizable as our country drew so heavily on Greco/Roman traditions ranging from symbolism and architecture to the reading of mythology and history. While the staff of Asclepius is possibly one of the most recognizable emblems in today’s medical world, present on nearly every ambulance in the nation. Yet how many symbols of native religions are easily identified in the United States? The examples given here, in the form of ceremonial masks, are the means by which this god of so many epithets is depicted in ritual and celebration. Masks are representations of animals associated with specific ancestors and/or gods, who then gifted the images to their descendants. Another example, more commonly known, of this practice is the totem pole. 

“Masks of Kumugwe often show him with sea creature attributes, such as rounded fish eyes, rows of gills at the corners of his mouth, fins encircling his head, the suction cups of an octopus, and fish and aquatic birds which frame or sit upon his head. His most important totemic animals are loons, seals, sea lions, octopuses, orcas, and sculpins.” (Wikipedia) Some of those animal associations can be found in the visual art representing Kumukwe, with some masks including gills, shells, or eyes similar to the creatures which fill his domain. Understanding this Ar in Mede March 2025 deity of good health, wealth and the sea is bolstered by educating oneself on contemporary practices made in his honor. That includes a quick lesson on Pacific tribal cosmology. 



Wood & pigment
Kwakwaka'wakw (Kwakiutl) culture
1880-90
Metropolitan Museum of Art

“The beings that make up Kwakiutl mythology are remarkably diverse. Accounts of their interactions with humans and each other are passed along through stories that not only form the basis of traditional Kwakiutl spiritual and ceremonial life and lore, but also connect Kwakiutl families to their ancestral pasts. Many contemporary Kwakiutl identify themselves as Christians but incorporate traditional mythology into their faith, freely blending elements of Christian and indigenous religion. Broadly speaking, Kwakiutl mythology divides the world into several realms: the mortal world, the sky world, the land beneath the sea, and the ghost world. In reality, however, it is difficult to discuss Kwakiutl mythology uniformly owing to the diverse accounts found among the many bands that constitute the Kwakiutl First Nations, though some underlying commonalities exist.” (Milwaukee Public Museum) 

A quick search online will of course surface Wikipedia, and though short, the entry on Kumugwe (also known as Komokwa) highlights the breadth of diversity in the many groups who incorporate this deity into their spiritual practice. According to that entry, Kumugwe is also attributed to Qaniqilak, a spirit associated with the summer fishing season and in opposition to Tseiqami (the Thunderbird) who guides the winter dance season. Said dance is a celebration that is held to this day in various locations along the western coast of North America, both in the United States and Canada. It is important to note that such performances were illegal for many years under the governments of both aforementioned nations, with sacred items such as the masks shared here being confiscated and sold or donated across the globe to collectors. The revitalization of those spiritual practices and reclamation of said objects, is an ongoing effort. 

“The Winter ceremonials summon the fearsome and powerful beings of the spirit world, including the most powerful and dreaded of all the supernatural beings, the Cannibal Spirit. This spirit possesses initiates of the most highly ranked of the Kwakiutl secret dance societies, the Hamatsa (cannibal society), and can only be forced to leave the body of the initiate with the guidance and intervention of shamans and close relatives. These performers, adorned with eagle down, red cedar bark (representing human flesh) and black paint, give embodiment to a wide array of animated spirits like cannibal birds (servants of the Cannibal Spirit, such as Raven, Crane, Crow and Crooked Beak), Nu?ama?a (Fool Dancers), and others.” (Milwaukee Public Museum) 

At time of writing, there is not a tremendous amount written on Kumugwe, but hopefully in the future that will change. 

References: 


Reprinted with the generous permission of Ms. Bennett.

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