- 1-2-X-4 (12.8)-a035942
- Item
- ca. 2000
Image depicts a transformation mask created by artist Stan Wamiss (Kwakwaka'wakw) installed at the Vancouver International Airport.
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Image depicts a transformation mask created by artist Stan Wamiss (Kwakwaka'wakw) installed at the Vancouver International Airport.
Dancers at potlatch, Alert Bay (?)
Photograph of dancers at an indoor potlatch or other event, likely in or near Alert Bay, BC. One dancer, wearing a mask, is kneeling.
Photograph of dancers at an outdoor event in Alert Bay, BC.
Photograph of a man wearing a mask, at an outdoor event in Alert Bay, BC.
Fonds consists of negative images of petroglyphs largely from the Pacific west coast of North America. Most of the images are from sites located in British Columbia, but there are also images from sites in Washington State, New Mexico, and other areas of the United States and Mexico. There are also images of artifacts, masks, totem poles, wood carvings, and graveyards. Images of family travels, landscapes, wild animals, and house cats are interspersed within the collection.
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File contains images of Tsimshian artifacts housed in museums in British Columbia and in what is now known as the Canadian Museum of History. The file also contains images of Tsimshian villages along the Nass River, and historical photos of Tsimshian peoples.
File contains historical images of Nuu-chah-nulth villages and peoples. There is a focus on totem poles and canoes. There are also photographs of a pole raising ceremony to commemorate the visit of Governor General Willingdon who came to Tofino/Ucluelet in the 1920s. There are images of James Rush, Chief Miste Laabats Hamtsiid, and Chief Joseph John, dressed in Nuu-chah-nulth regalia.
Display Museum of Anthropology, U.B.C., Vancouver
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of a display of masks at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.
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Packing in old museum in preparation for move 1975
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Image of a person packing a mask in the storage area of the old Museum of Anthropology.
Able John (73 yrs), Gold River BC
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Able John wearing a mask. An image of John is printed on page 119 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Able John, born at Ehahsitaht but now living at Gold River. A friendly happy man he carves authentic Nootka masks to supplement his the earnings."
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Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Kingcome resident holding a mask carved by the late chief Willie Seaweed of Blunden Harbour. A colour version of this image is printed on page 49 of Carter's book From History's Locker.
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Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of two unidentified masks, possibly from the University of British Columbia's Museum of Anthropology.
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Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of what appears to be a mask, featured painted, carved wood, feathers, shells, and fur.
Kwakwaka'wakw mask display at U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Kwakwaka'wakw masks display at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.
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Kwakwaka'wakw mask display at U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Kwakwaka'wakw masks display at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.
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Group in ceremonial dress on dock, Alert Bay
Photograph of a group of people in ceremonial dress standing on a dock in Alert Bay, BC. Most are looking away from the camera, toward a boat next to the dock.
Masked dancer and crowd, Alert Bay
Photograph of a dancer at an outdoor event, possibly a potlatch. The dancer is wearing a mask. A crowd is gathered around him.
Dancers at potlatch, Alert Bay (?)
Photograph of dancers at an indoor potlatch or other event, likely in or near Alert Bay, BC. The dancers are wearing masks.
Photograph of a masked dancer in Alert Bay, BC. The man is outside.
Parte deWilson Duff fonds
File consists of correspondence from 1966 and 1967 between Wilson Duff and K.O.L. Burridge, of the Pitt Rivers Museum, regarding Haida potlatch masks. Included is correspondence from 1902 between Franz Boas and E.B. Tylor, which notes a discussion between Charles Edenshaw and John Swanton. The file also consists of b&w photos of the masks and the article "The Haidas," from Harper's New Monthly Magazine, dated June-November 1882.