- 92-1-a034531
- Item
- [ca. 1964 - 1967]
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts painting a totem pole. A woman paints in the foreground; Doug Cranmer stands at the other end of the pole.
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Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts painting a totem pole. A woman paints in the foreground; Doug Cranmer stands at the other end of the pole.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts Doug Cranmer taking a break from carving. He sits on a wooden stool with his chain saw at his feet.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a carver working on a partially carved pole. The pole is lying on the ground outside.
Completed pole inside packing crate
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a close up of a totem pole, wrapped in plastic and encased in a packing crate.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a carver, possibly Godfrey Hunt, working on a partially carved totem pole. Depicted images include a Thunderbird and a figure holding a copper. This may be the St. Catherines. Ontario Centennial Confederation pole, carved in 1967.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts the top portion of what may be a small scale totem pole. The image depicted seems to be a Thunderbird, painted in black, white, red, green, and gold. There is another figure below this, but it is not discernible in this photo.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts carving a canoe outdoors. The carver depicted may be Godfrey Hunt, who assisted Douglas Cranmer with the Nootka canoe.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a partially completed wood carving, possibly a canoe. Photo has been taken inside and shows woodworking tools. It is hard to distinguish what the carving is.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a carver, possibly Douglas Cranmer, working inside on what may be a canoe. Image is dark and it is difficult to see what he is doing.
Parte de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a carver, possibly Douglas Cranmer, working inside on what may be a totem pole. The carving is still in the early stages and it is difficult to tell what will be depicted.
House Frontal Totem Pole, UBC Totem Park
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a pole carved as the frontal pole for the front of the Haida house, at UBC, for display in Totem Park. Moved to the new Museum of Anthropology grounds in 1978. Pole was removed from the Haida House in 2000-09 and placed in a greenhouse tent for conservation treatment and drying. A new pole was raised outside to replace it (see MOA object Nb1.752). Jim Hart, with Reg Davidson, Michael Nicoll and Tyler Crosby, performed a small informal ceremony for the re-raising of the pole on Oct. 30, 2002 (with Martine Reid in attendance). Pole was then re-raised in the Great Hall of the Museum on Oct. 31, 2002.
Sem título
Haida house and mortuary house being reassembled
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Image shows the Haida and mortuary houses while they were being reassembled during relocation from Totem Park.
Museum grounds facing future site of Haida house
Parte de MOA General Media collection
A photograph of the museum grounds facing the future site of the Haida house and Mortuary house. An unidentified man stands in the foreground.
The mortuary house being reassembled
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Image shows the mortuary house while it was being reassembled.
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Haida house, a house frontal totem pole, a mortuary pole, and the Wasgo sculpture, standing in Totem Park.
Doug Cranmer carving frontal plate Haida pole
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer carving the frontal plate of what was likely a double mortuary pole at UBC in 1962.
Double mortuary pole at totem park
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Double mortuary pole carved by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer standing in totem park at UBC.
Bill Reid's pole at UBC Totem Park
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Section of the mortuary totem pole carved by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer for the Haida House complex at Totem Park.
Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer carving
Parte de MOA General Media collection
Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer carving the dogfish panel for the double mortuary pole to be placed near the Haida House in Totem Park.
Parte de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer and another person (likely Roy Hanuse) carving a totem pole at the University of British Columbia.