(Replica)? Haida dwelling house, Totem Park, UBC, Vancouver
- 134-a040108c
- Pièce
- 7 Aug. 1972
Fait partie de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Mortuary House frontal pole by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer (1960-61) moved from Totem Park to MOA in 1978.
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(Replica)? Haida dwelling house, Totem Park, UBC, Vancouver
Fait partie de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Mortuary House frontal pole by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer (1960-61) moved from Totem Park to MOA in 1978.
Final lecture of Anthropology 301, April 3, 1974, “Resurgence of Indian Culture”
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of a lecture given by Wilson Duff on the “Resurgence of Indian Culture.” On side A, Duff speaks on the failings of colonialist education systems, First Nations traditional knowledge, and his interpretations of Haida art. Works discussed include a Raven rattle and a chest carved by Charles Edenshaw. Side B continues with Duff’s observations on government interest in, and appropriation of, First Nations art and culture as symbols of Canadian identity, and cultural repatriation.
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Wolf dish carved by Bill Reid while he was in Montréal.
Totem pole and house at Old Kasaan
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Image of an old house and totem pole belonging to Chief Son-i-hat at Old Kasaan. This photograph is likely from a book by Marius Barbeau or Edward Linnaeus Keithahn.
Painting equipment on display in Montréal
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Painting equipment on display in Montréal for the Museum of Anthropology's Northwest Coast exhibit for "Man and His World".
Haida house and mortuary house being reassembled
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Image shows the Haida and mortuary houses while they were being reassembled during relocation from Totem Park.
Memorial pole by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
In the foreground is the memorial pole by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer. The newly constructed Haida and mortuary houses are in the background with other totem poles.
A crawler loader and other earth-moving machine at the Museum of Anthropology
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
A crawler loader and another earth-moving machine prepares the grounds for the new Museum of Anthropology.
Wasgo sculpture on display in Montréal
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
A Wasgo sculpture from the Museum of Anthropology on display in Montréal for the Northwest coast exhibit of "Man and His World".
Wasgo sculpture on display in Montréal
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
A Wasgo sculpture from the Museum of Anthropology on display in Montréal for the Northwest coast exhibit of "Man and His World".
Bear sculpture on display in Montréal
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Bill Reid's bear sculpture on display in Montréal for the Northwest Coast exhibit of "Man and His World".
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Dishes on display for the Museum of Anthropology's Northwest Coast exhibit for "Man and His World".
Argillite pipes and figures on display in Montréal
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Two argillite pipes and two argillite figures on display in Montréal for the Museum of Anthropology's Northwest Coast exhibit for "Man and His World".
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of a section of a totem pole, featuring a beaver, on Anthony Island, Haida Gwaii. This appears to be a pole now housed at the Museum of Anthropology (museum item #A50013). This museum item has the following description: "Base section of a wooden totem pole, crescent shaped in cross section and carved in shallow and deep relief. Depicted is a seated beaver with one potlatch ring between erect ears; protruding upper incisors; raised forepaws and hind paws grasping chewing sticks. Below its rectangular shaped crosshatched tail is a human face with large circular eyes. Traces of blue in eye sockets and around nostrils... Beaver was one of crests owned by the lineage of Chief Ninstints (Tom Price), 'Those Born Up the Inlet', of the Eagle moiety... Remainder of pole, except top figure, burned when the village was burned in 1892 by the Koskimo and the crew of a sealing schooner. ."
Totem pole or house post, Anthony Island
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Village remains in forest, Anthony Island
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Anthony Island inlet, with village site in background
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Fait partie de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer carving two totem poles at the University of British Columbia.