Chief Mungo Martin memorial, pole raising
- 25-03-06-a037975
- Item
- 1970
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the raising of a totem pole made in memory of the Kwakiutl Chief Mungo Martin. The pole was placed at his grave.
Sem título
160 resultados com objetos digitais Mostrar resultados com objetos digitais
Chief Mungo Martin memorial, pole raising
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the raising of a totem pole made in memory of the Kwakiutl Chief Mungo Martin. The pole was placed at his grave.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the memorial held for the Kwakiutl Chief Mungo Martin, showing adults and children gathered for the event.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the memorial held for the Kwakiutl Chief Mungo Martin, showing adults and children gathered for the event.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the memorial held for the Kwakiutl Chief Mungo Martin, showing adults and children gathered for the event.
Sem título
Chief Johnson, Fort Rupert, Alert Bay
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Chief Johnson of Fort Rupert BC with a group of three men and one woman (all unidentified). A portrait of Johnson from what appears to be the same photoshoot is printed on page 36 of Carter's book From History's Locker, with the caption: "He is the Head Chief over all Kwakiutl Nation, his Indian name is 'Kla-Kwa-Gila' which means, 'Place where they make coppers." At 97 years he is a fine looking man."
Sem título
Chief Johnson, Fort Rupert, Alert Bay
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Chief Johnson of Fort Rupert BC with an unidentified woman. A portrait of Johnson from what appears to be the same photoshoot is printed on page 36 of Carter's book From History's Locker, with the caption: "He is the Head Chief over all Kwakiutl Nation, his Indian name is 'Kla-Kwa-Gila' which means, 'Place where they make coppers." At 97 years he is a fine looking man."
Sem título
Chief Johnson, Fort Rupert, Alert Bay
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Chief Johnson of Fort Rupert, BC. A similar image of him is printed on page 36 of Carter's book From History's Locker, with the caption: "He is the Head Chief over all Kwakiutl Nation, his Indian name is 'Kla-Kwa-Gila' which means, 'Place where they make coppers." At 97 years he is a fine looking man."
Sem título
Kwakwaka'wakw mask display at U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Kwakwaka'wakw masks and material culture display at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.
Sem título
Kwakwaka'wakw mask display at U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Kwakwaka'wakw masks display at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
File consists of images of Kwakwaka'wakw displays the the Museum of Anthropology at UBC.
Sem título
Kwakiutl longhouse, Kingcome Inlet
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of the interior carved columns of a Kwakiutl longhouse at Kingcome Inlet, BC. A long canoe runs the length of the centre of the longhouse.
Sem título
Old carved house posts, Mamalilikulla, Village Island
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of carved house posts at the Mamalilikulla village, Village Island. Tone post is still partially standing. The others are lying in the grass.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of an old totem pole at the Mamalilikulla village, Village Island. The pole is being held up by a rope.
Sem título
Parte de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of totem pole carved by Charles James.
The pole was re-adzed and re-painted by Kwakwaka'wakw carver Mungo Martin before shipping to UBC in 1947. Repainted and repaired by Ellen Neel (1949) and by Mungo Martin (1950-51). It stood at Totem Pole Park, UBC Campus until it was re-located to the Museum's Great Hall ca. 1976.
Sem título
Parte de Vickie Jensen and Jay Powell fonds
Item consists of a recording of Learning Kwak'wala: Book 1 My Village My House, and it features Agnes Cranmer, Margaret Cook, and Jay Powell engaging in vocabulary and grammar exercises in the workbook, Jay Powell asks the questions in English and Agnes Cranmer and Margaret Cook give the response in Kwak'wala; Side A: pages 36, 4-18 begins with the Kwak'wala alphabet, and covers the vocabulary for the types of houses and villages, places in the villages their locations with a focus on Alert Bay and surrounding villages, where someone is going, asking what something is, things found at the breakwater, things found at the grocery store and how to express when someone wants something, things found in a school and phrases used in a school setting, vocabulary for things found in nature and how to describe the weather, for the English translation of bak'wam "Indian" is used; Side B: pages 19-33, and covers things used when camping and where things are in the camp, parts of a house and things found there, grammar for who owns a house, vocabulary associated with cooking, eating, and the kitchen, items found in the living room, items found in the bathroom, things in the bedroom, numbers and how to say how many houses and boats there are. Also begins book 2 with some of the vocabulary for family members, but this is also covered in the tape specific to book 2. Recorded on both sides.
Book 9, tape 1: Learning Kwak'wala Series
Parte de Vickie Jensen and Jay Powell fonds
Item consists of a recording of the Learning Kwak’wala Book 9: Workbook and accompanies Book 6: Saying Everyday Things, and it features Agnes Cranmer, Margaret Cook, and Jay Powell engaging in vocabulary and grammar exercises in the workbook, Jay Powell asks the questions in English and Agnes Cranmer and Margaret Cook give the response in Kwak’wala; Side A: pages 4-15; Side B: pages 16-27, 32-33. Recorded on both sides, : Side A stops early near the end of the exercise on page 15; skips game portions of the workbook; Side B stops early halfway through the exercise on page 33. Recorded on both sides.
Book 11, tape 2: Learning Kwak'wala Series
Parte de Vickie Jensen and Jay Powell fonds
Item consists of a recording of the Learning Kwak’wala book 11: Workbook, and it features Agnes Cranmer, Margaret Cook, and Jay Powell engaging in vocabulary and grammar exercises in the workbook, Jay Powell asks the questions in English and Agnes Cranmer and Margaret Cook give the response in Kwak’wala; Side A: pages 36-59, on page 39, "Indian" is used for the English translation of a sentence, skips the review on pages 51-54 and ends with the days of the week and the months. Recorded only on side A, no sound on side B.
Parte de William McLennan (MOA Curator) fonds
Image depicts the exhibition The Pacific Passage installed at the Vancouver International Airport. The focal point of the photograph is Hetux, a large Thunderbird sculpture created by artist Connie Watts (Nuu-chah-nulth, Gitxsan and Kwakwaka'wakw).
Parte de William McLennan (MOA Curator) fonds
This subseries contains records relating to an exhibit built at the Canadian Museum of Civilization. McLennan was the project manager and design developer for this project. He oversaw the completion and installation of six west coast First Nation house designs: Coast Salish, Haida, Tsimshian, Bella Coola, Oweekeno, and Kwakwaka'wakw. The records include newspaper clippings, correspondence, photographs, and notes.
Parte de William McLennan (MOA Curator) fonds
File includes one photograph of MOA Object ID A2524 which is a feast dish. The photograph is annotated with handwritten information about its original repository. The contents of this file were used to create object labels for MOA's Great Hall.