Tyarm (Heredity: Hereditary Chiefs of the Haida)
- 71-6-76
- Bestanddeel
- 1998
13499 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Tyarm (Heredity: Hereditary Chiefs of the Haida)
TwoRow II [exhibition planning binder]
Part of Director's fonds
Two-Headed Fish Sculpture Photographs
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
File consists of textual records and 5 photographs. Images of Stone Bowl. 2 - Headed Fish bowl. Northwest Coast Indigenous. Bottom, side, front and top views. Black and White. 5" x 7" prints.
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of two girls and a boy sitting on ground, Haida Gwaii.
Zonder titel
Two young girls posing for picture
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph showing two young girls posing for picture. They are wearing ceremonial dress. Possibly by photographer Ogawa Kazumasa
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts two rectangular wooden panels carved with a variety of figures and crests. Central to both carvings is a figure with large ovoid eyes. These may be the McMichael lintels.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts two rectangular wooden panels carved with a variety of figures and crests. Central to both carvings is a figure with large ovoid eyes. This view shows the top carving littered with what looks to be sawdust. These may be the McMichael lintels.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts two rectangular wooden panels carved with a variety of figures and crests. Central to both carvings is a figure with large ovoid eyes. This view shows details of the carvings' left sides. These may be the McMichael lintels.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts two rectangular wooden panels carved with a variety of figures and crests. Central to both carvings is a figure with large ovoid eyes. These may be the McMichael lintels.
Two women working on silk worms
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph showing two women working on silk worms. Possibly by photographer Kozaburo Tamamura
Two women with tea ceremony objects
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph showing two women dressed in traditional dress against a white background with tea ceremony objects. Reads, "Ladies saluting. One calling upon the other."
Two women kneeling in front of screens
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph showing two women kneeling in front of screens. They are wearing ceremonial dress. Possibly by photographer Ogawa Kazumasa
Two women in front of Alert Bay Community House
Two women stand in front of the Alert Bay Community House. To the women's right is a table that appears to hold barbecued salmon. The painted wall of the Community House can be seen in the background.
Two women in ceremonial dress and a girl
Two women in ceremonial dress stand in front of a wall painted with designs, some of which resemble a face. A blond girl poses in front of the women. The back of the photo is labeled Laurie. The women may be Mrs. Crammer and Mrs. Alfred, ceremonial dancers. See also item a033232.
Two women in canoe carrying goods
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of two women in a canoe near the shoreline. The canoe is loaded with baskets and sacks.
Zonder titel
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph of two women wearing traditional clothing looking down in an entranceway. Possibly by photographer Kozaburo Tamamura
Two women in a field of tall flowers
Part of James Davidson collection
Item is a photograph of two women standing in a field of tall flowers. They are wearing traditional dress.
Two women and a table of salmon
A woman stands next to a table holding a fillet of salmon ready for barbecuing. Another woman sits at the table preparing other fillets for cooking. Trees and blooming shrubs are visible in the background, as is a structure that may be an outhouse.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Two Nuu-chah-nulth wolf headdresses. These were used as temporary grave parkers to indicate a memorial potlatch was being planned.
Two totem poles standing in Totem Park
Part of MOA General Media collection
Two totem poles standing in Totem Park. The pole on the viewer's right was carved by George Hunt Sr. The pole is now part of the museum's collection.
This pole was originally carved for the Edward S. Curtis film "In the Land of the War Canoes" which was originally titled "In the Land of the Head Hunters." The pole was repaired and re-painted by carvers Ellen Neel in 1949 and Mungo Martin in 1950-51. It stood at Totem Park, UBC Campus until it was re-located to the Museum's Great Hall in 1976.