The objects shown here are drawn from the Jensen Arctic Collection, an assemblage of more than 5,000 objects which provide an extraordinary record of the lives, technologies, and environments of Indigenous Arctic Peoples. Representing a time of accelerating climatic and economic change, the collection highlights several significant cultural transitions in the Arctic during the 20th century—the shift from a traditional subsistence economy to a cash economy, the incorporation of Western materials into traditional designs, and the transition from traditional to Western education.
Major holdings in the collection include:
- Traditional clothing, tools, masks, and baskets;
- Traditional and contemporary art made from skin, ivory, bone, and stone;
- Taxidermy specimens: owls, foxes, wolves, caribou, musk oxen, brown bear, and two polar bears;
- A 1,000-book reference library;
- All records associated with the Academic Enrichment Program, an eleven-year student exchange between Alaska and Oregon elementary schools.
The Jensen Arctic Collection is the legacy of Paul Jensen (1907 – 1994), who for 30 years served the Arctic as a professor, researcher, and advocate for Native people. During that time, he collected over 2,000 objects that reflect the cultures and natural history of the region. Jensen founded the Jensen Arctic Museum at Western Oregon University in 1985 and served as its director until his death in 1994. Over time, an additional 250 donors contributed more than 3,000 objects from their own collections. In 2013, the Jensen Arctic Museum closed due to funding challenges, and its holdings were transferred to the Museum of Natural and Cultural History, where they complement the extensive Arctic and Subarctic collections already housed at the museum.
The selections in this web gallery, only a small sample of the vast Jensen Arctic Collection, testify to the ingenuity, expertise, and resilience of Arctic peoples.
Text by Roben Itchoak. Object photography by Cheyenne Dickenson and Bill Madden. Images © UO Museum of Natural and Cultural History.
Further Reading
Jensen, Arlene
1999 Adventures of a Collector. Monmouth: Jensen Arctic Museum.
Nelson, Edward William
1979 Eskimo About Bering Strait. New York: Johnson Reprint Corporation.
Ray, Dorothy Jean
1975 Eskimo of Bering Strait, 1650-1898. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
1996 Legacy of Arctic Art. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Thiry, Paul and Mary
1977 Eskimo Artifacts Designed for Use. Seattle: Superior Publishing Company.
Wardwell, Allen
1986 Ancient Eskimo Ivories of the Bering Strait. New York: Hudson Hills Press.