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‘All the Eggs in One Basket’ exhibit celebrates Cherokee, Southern Appalachian basketry

Some of the Cherokee- and Southern Appalachian-style baskets on display at the Strawberry Plains Campus Library.
The Appalachian Heritage Project at Pellissippi State’s Strawberry Plains Campus features a new exhibit of Cherokee-style and Southern Appalachian-style baskets. (Photo by Allison McKittrick/Pellissippi State)

Cherokee basketry and Southern Appalachian basket styles are on display now at Pellissippi State Community College’s Strawberry Plains Campus. 

The “All the Eggs in One Basket” exhibit curated by Art Professor Jeffrey Lockett is free and open to the public through the college’s Appalachian Heritage Project, which is housed in the Strawberry Plains Campus Library. Funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Appalachian Heritage Project serves as a repository for regional literature, history and folklore and includes programming including exhibits, lectures and workshops. 

“Abundant river cane in the Southern Appalachians contributes to its widespread use in weaving and basketry,” Lockett said. “The known works of the 17th century Cherokee Indians introduced the unique combination of materials and weave patterns using this cane.” 

In the 18th and 19th centuries, storage baskets were used for daily needs such as harvesting, transportation and food preparation, Lockett added. However, as mountain tourism and markets for mountain crafts grew into the 20th century, Cherokee basket makers responded by producing baskets for the tourist trade. 

Most baskets on display in the “All the Eggs in One Basket” exhibit were made by Jimmy Lawrence of Clinton, Tennessee.  Lawrence, born in 1937 in Abington, Virginia,  is a Virginia Tech-educated mechanical engineer with a lifelong fascination with Appalachian crafts. He and his wife, Gail, have a regionally known collection of Southern folk art, crafts and utilitarian ware at their home. 

“Jimmy says his curiosity for Southern crafts together with his engineering background has allowed him to approach basketmaking and weaving as an artform as well as an achievement in engineering,” said Lockett, who named the exhibit in honor of the variety of Lawrence’s traditional egg baskets that are on display. “Jimmy takes traditional Appalachian styles as well as Cherokee weaving traditions and varies the materials to include slippery elm bark, native cane and white oak.” 

All works in the exhibit are from the collections of Lawrence or Lockett. 

The Strawberry Plains Campus Library is open 8 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday and 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday. 

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