Affichage de 185 résultats

description archivistique
Pièce Architectural elements Anglais
Aperçu avant impression Hierarchy Affichage :

182 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques

House post in situ on Anthony Island

Members of the B.C. Totem Pole Preservation Committee, Bill Reid (wearing aht) and Wilson Duff, inspecting a house post on Anthony Island. This house post was removed and brought to the Museum of Anthropology.

House post at UBC

A house post recovered by the Totem Pole Preservation Committee standing outside at UBC near the War Memorial Gym.

House post at UBC

A house post recovered by the Totem Pole Preservation Committee standing outside at UBC near the War Memorial Gym.

House post

Image of a house post in the house of Thomas Hailhemas on Kitit Island.

Sans titre

House frontal totem poles in situ

House frontal totem poles in situ near Fort Rupert. These were removed and stood in Totem Park at U.B.C. for several years before they were transferred to the new Museum of Anthropology.

House frontal totem pole, Anthony Island

Image of an old house post on Anthony Island, Haida Gwaii. This appears to the same as a post now housed at the Museum of Anthropology. This museum item is decribed as follows: "The lower section of a totem, crescent shaped in cross section, carved in shallow and deep relief. From top to bottom: bear with protruding tongue and raven on body, kneeling on head of unknown creature... Figures probably from historical narratives owned by lineages of house owner and wife. Grizzly bear was a crest of the lineages of the 'Striped Town People' and 'Sand Town People' of the Raven Moiety, to one of which the husband may have belonged. The supernatural Snag was also a crest of the 'Striped Town People'. Human arms of the raven or cormorant may indicate ability to transform from animal to human."

House frontal totem pole

A house frontal totem pole said to be from Oweekeno. This appears to be the totem pole that was taken from Rivers Inlet to the Museum of Anthropology in 1956, as part of the B.C. Totem Pole Preservation Committee.

Résultats 101 à 120 sur 185