Sealaska Heritage Institute Press Release

SHI announces apprentices in Hoonah for Kootéeyaa Deiyí project

Community apprentices begin carving with Gordon Greenwald for next Totem Pole Trail installation

July 31, 2025

Sealaska Heritage Institute (SHI) has selected two apprentices in Hoonah to work under master carver Gordon Greenwald (Kaach Yaas) as part of Kootéeyaa Deiyí (Totem Pole Trail), a major public art and education project aimed at revitalizing the practice of monumental carving and increasing the number of trained Alaska Native artists.

The apprentices—Cheyanne Jack (Shangukeidí) and Louie White Jr. (T’aḵdeintaan)—have begun their training and are assisting Greenwald in the design and carving of a new pole that will be installed in Juneau in 2026.

Jack, a lifelong Hoonah resident, said carving has offered a powerful connection to culture and community.

“I learn something new each day by carving totems. It’s something I want to keep learning, and I want to take on and teach others about our history,” she said.

White brings past experience apprenticing on totem poles and studying formline and carving. He joined the project to deepen his knowledge of the Tlingit style of Northwest Coast art and hopes to eventually pass on what he’s learned to others.

The team is currently working at the downtown carving site in Hoonah. Starting Sept. 15, the group will relocate to a shared classroom at Hoonah High School for the fall and winter seasons. Hoonah community members are welcome to visit both locations to observe the process.

The Hoonah apprentices are part of the second phase of Kootéeyaa Deiyí. The goal is to expand the number of artists with training in monumental carving and increase visibility for Indigenous public art. Apprentices who complete the program may be eligible for up to 18 credits toward an Associate of Arts degree with an emphasis in Northwest Coast arts through the University of Alaska Southeast (UAS).

About the Artist
Gordon Greenwald (Kaach Yaas) is a Tlingit artist of the Eagle moiety and Chookaneidí clan from Xáatl Hít (Iceberg House) in Hoonah. He taught grades 7–12 for 34 years and developed the Northwest Coast Native Art curriculum for Hoonah City School District, where he taught for more than two decades.

Greenwald has studied formline design, tool making and carving since the 1970s under master artists and educators including Ernest Smeltzer, David Boxley, Dempsey Bob and Doug Chilton. He led the design and carving for the Xunaa Shuká Hít (Huna Tribal House) in Bartlett Cove, which included four house posts, a monumental interior screen, an exterior house front and three kootéeyaas. Since 2018, he has led Hoonah’s City Totem Project, where he and his team have carved four kootéeyaas and mentored numerous apprentices.

Now retired from public education, Greenwald continues to focus on carving and cultural education full time.

About Kootéeyaa Deiyí
In 2022, SHI installed the first 12 of 30 totems for Totem Pole Trail, an initiative launched through a $2.9 million grant from the Mellon Foundation. The poles form a cultural entry point to Heritage Square in downtown Juneau and reflect clan histories, crests and migrations of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people. Each kootéeyaa is accompanied by interpretive signage. (Totem Pole Trail Guide)

About Totem Poles
One of the most widely known art forms of the Northwest Coast, totem poles (kootéeyaa in Tlingit) are carved from red cedar and raised to mark significant occasions or honor important individuals. The figures and crests on totem poles reflect the rich clan histories, migrations and oral traditions of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people. SHI’s Totem Pole Trail is part of a larger movement to reclaim and elevate these public cultural expressions.

Sealaska Heritage Institute is a tribal organization founded in 1980 to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures of Southeast Alaska. SHI also conducts scientific and public policy research that promotes Alaska Native arts, cultures, history and education statewide. The institute is governed by a Board of Trustees and guided by a Council of Traditional Scholars, a Native Artist Committee, a Southeast Regional Language Committee and a newly formed Education Committee.

CONTACT: Therese Pokorney, SHI Communications Officer, therese.pokorney@sealaska.com

Caption: Nathan Jackson carving a totem mole. Photo by Mircea Brown. Note: Media outlets are permitted to use this image for coverage of this story. For a higher-res image, contact therese.pokorney@sealaska.com

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