Lions gate Bridge from Stanley Park
- 86-02-a039730
- Item
- [1949 or 1950]
Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of the Lions gate Bridge from the Stanley Park side.
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13499 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
Lions gate Bridge from Stanley Park
Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of the Lions gate Bridge from the Stanley Park side.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of several docked ships at the Harbour of Alert bay with houses in the background.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image taken from ship in Telegraph Cove on the Georgia Strait.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of the steamship the Princess Marguerite sailing in the Georgia Strait. The Princess Marguerite was built for the B.C Coast Service by the Fairfield Company of Glasgow, Scotland. It commonly sailed the Seattle-Victoria-Vancouver triangle.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of an unknown hillside with burned trees which are most likely the remains of a forest fire .
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of an unknown hillside with burned trees which are most likely the remains of a forest fire .
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of a ferry dock over an unidentified water way. In the foreground of are two cars.
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Prevent Forest Fire sign in Manning Park
Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of a roadway in Manning Park. In the foreground is a 'Prevent Forest Fire' sign in the shape of a mock gallows with a hanging cigarette. The side of the sign reads "Ye Olde Manning Park Gallows" The bottom of the sign reads "The One Who Dropped It Should Also Be Hanged. Prevent Forest Fires. B.C. Forest Service.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of two totem poles at Alert Bay. In the foreground is a memorial pole for Chief Wakas. It was raised in 1924 and carved by Arthur Shaughnessy. In the background is a memorial pole for Amos Dawson's uncle. Carved by Charlie James.
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of a memorial pole at Alert Bay. Inscription at the bottom held by the figure reads "In loving memory of Tlaowa Latle of the Qiowasudinuk (Kwakwaka'wakw: Kwikwasut'inuxw) Tribe. Died Nov. 9 [rest of inscription illegible].
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Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of two totem poles at Alert Bay. In the foreground is a memorial pole for Chief Wakas. It was raised in 1924 and carved by Arthur Shaughnessy. In the background is a memorial pole for Amos Dawson's uncle. Carved by Charlie James.
Sin título
Parte deWilliam Carr fonds
Image of several docked boats. The large steamship is the Catala.
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"The Hunting Ground" Piegan, Montana (1912)
Parte deRoland Reed collection
Image of three Piegan Blackfeet men on horseback in Montana.
Tribute to the Dead, 1912, Piegan, Montana
Parte deRoland Reed collection
Image of a Piegan Blackfeet memorial structure, with a man and woman next to it.
The Signal (Nay-Gway-Dway-We-Hah-Aung-Gah-Prid), 1907
Parte deRoland Reed collection
Image of a man standing on a rocky bank, with arm raised.
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Item is an audio recording of a lecture by the American anthropologist and linguist Dr. Wayne Suttles. The recording is Lecture #2 in the University of British Columbia's Center for Continuing Education Lecture Series on Traditions of North West Coast Indian Culture. Note that mp3 file is only 1 minute in length.
Celebration of the Raven and The Raven Series
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Interview with Bill Reid about Celebration of the Raven Part 2
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Item is the second of a three part sound recording of an interview with Bill Reid about the origins of his carving The Raven and the First Men, located at MOA. The interviewer is unknown. During the interview he discusses how the sculpture was the result of a highly collaborative process involving other artists, his impression of the location of the carving in MOA, and his working relationship with Walter C. Koerner who commissioned the sculpture. He lastly discusses his representation and interpreation of the Haida legend that the carving is based on. This recording is part of Celebration of the Raven which documented the creation of the Raven and the First Men Sculpture, its relocation to the Museum of Anthropology, and the unveiling by the Prince of Wales in 1982.