- 25-03-12-a038181
- Item
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of two women in a canoe near the shoreline. The canoe is loaded with baskets and sacks.
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of two women in a canoe near the shoreline. The canoe is loaded with baskets and sacks.
Parte deRobert Reford fonds
Item is an image of three women. Two of the women are sitting by a table, having tea, the third woman is serving the tea. People in the photograph are identified in annotations.
Parte deStanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts five women canoeing along a river. Several structures, possibly houses, are visible in the background, as are trees at the water's edge.
Parte deJames Davidson collection
Item is a photograph showing women and men in a garden. All are wearing ceremonial dress
Women and children in front of a building
Parte deFrederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a group of women and children outside a building, likely taken in a Hopi village in Arizona.
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Woman working in an office at the new Museum of Anthropology building.
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Woman working at the front desk of the new Museum of Anthropology building.
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of a woman weaving a basket. Different images of the same woman and scene are printed on page 112 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Basket weaving, and art that reaches its highest form among the Nootka tribe, is still very much in vogue today. Here Mrs. Wilson works with local grasses to create a beautiful little trinket basket."
Sin título
Parte deFrederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a woman weaving at a loom taken somewhere in the American Southwest, likely in Arizona.
Parte deFrederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph of a woman, likely Zuni (A:shiwi), sitting at a loom and weaving. The photograph was likely taken in Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico.
Parte deJames Davidson collection
Item is a photograph a woman tending cherry blossoms. Reads, "A JAPANESE LADY."
Woman Standing with Two Buckets at her Feet
Parte deRobert Reford fonds
Item is an image of a woman standing with two buckets at her feet. Because of its location in the album, the photograph could have been taken in Rigolet
Parte deStanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts a woman standing near the edge of a rapids filled river. The river is surrounded by trees. The woman may be Read's wife Ruth.
Parte deJames Davidson collection
Item is a photograph of a woman wearing traditional clothing standing on a terrace surrounded by wisteria
Woman next to thunderbird totem pole
Photograph of a woman posing next to an unidentified totem pole in Alert Bay, BC. The pole features two figures: a human figure on the bottom with outstretched arms, and a thunderbird on top.
Woman next to thunderbird totem pole
Photograph of a woman posing next to an unidentified totem pole in Alert Bay, BC. The pole features two figures: a human figure on the bottom with outstretched arms, and a thunderbird on top.
Woman next to short totem pole
Photograph of a woman posing next to an unidentified short totem pole in Alert Bay, BC. The pole features a single human figure with a hat.
Parte deReverend Thomas Crosby fonds
Image is a posed portrait of a woman standing outdoors and wearing a short wool cape. Image appears to be reproduction that has been mounted on carte de visite. Inscription beneath image is illegible due to damage to emulsion on original image.
Parte deNadia Abu-Zahra fonds
Photograph of a woman taken in the saoifa, entrance to the courtyard, where Tunisian women receive their visitors in the summer. The photograph was taken by Nadia Abu-Zahra in Sidi Ameur, the Sahel, Tunisia.
Parte deLorna R. Marsden fonds
Photograph of a group of people, including a woman wearing a shemma cloth that has become dirty with wear. Shemma cloth is a hand woven material ubiquitous in Ethiopia, but particularly in northern Ethiopia. Lorna R. Marsden purchased an example of a shemma cloth designed for special occasions during her travels which she later donated to the Museum of Anthropology in 2016, but this image shows its typical and everyday use by women in the late 1960s and early 1970s as a wrap for head and bodies.