Chief Tommie Squinas - Ulkatcho-Carrier, 1924
- 87-11
- Item
- 1924
Parte deHarlan Smith collection
Lives at Anahim Lake and gives his age as 70 years old. Both his father and mother were Ulkatcho
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Chief Tommie Squinas - Ulkatcho-Carrier, 1924
Parte deHarlan Smith collection
Lives at Anahim Lake and gives his age as 70 years old. Both his father and mother were Ulkatcho
Fieldwork Portrait of Chief Tommie Squinas (Ulkatcho-Carrier), 1924
Parte deHarlan Smith collection
Image of Agnes Alfred standing by a chair. Photograph taken in a professional studio.
Handwritten annotation on back "Axu"
Item was originally numbered by creator with number 113.
MOA Magazine, Issue 07, Spring 2019
This issue contains articles on current and upcoming exhibitions, the new Collections Access Grant program, the release of the book People Among the People: The Public Art of Susan Point, Shadows, Strings and Other Things: The Enchanting Theatre of Puppets and related programs, Javanese puppeteer Sutrisno Hartana, the Ninini (Earthquake) dance at the Frank Nelson Memorial Potlatch, MOA's conservators Miriam Clavir and Heidi Swierenga, highlights from the MOA archives, the book Divine Threads: The Visual and Material Culture of Cantonese Opera by April Liu, and how to leave a gift to MOA in your will.
The majority of this file contains historical images of the Tlingit and Tahltan First Nations and their respective villages. The other images are of Tlingit or Tahltan artifacts housed in various museums in Canada and the United States. The historic images are of Tlingit or Tahltan villages which include images of Northwest Coast architecture, houses posts and totem poles, canoes, and other household items such as bowls, weavings, and bentwood boxes. There are also some images of the Tlingit people in regalia. The textual records contained in this file is a paper titled "The History of the Babine Carriers," written by Wilfred Adam for the class Education 479, Cross Cultural Education.
File contains images of various First Nations Cultural groups from the Pacific Northwest. The images include negatives and slides of Northwest Coast villages, totem poles, longhouses, and First Nations peoples dressed in regalia.
File contains a combination of historical and modern day images of canoes used by First Nation groups living on the Northwest Coast. The historical images contain images of village life and uses of the canoe in a historical context. The modern day images show canoes housed in various museums in Canada and the United States. The textual records contained in this file are photocopies of images of canoes, both from historical photographs and of modern day photographs.
File consists of photographic prints depicting Oweekeno cultural objects from other institutions. Many of the prints are annotated with handwritten, stamped, or typed information about the contents of the images or their original repositories. The contents of this file were used to create object labels for MOA Object ID A50006 in MOA's Great Hall.
Subseries consists of material relating to a commercial tour that focused on Kwakiutl land and culture. The records in this subseries take the form of notes, correspondence, and memoranda.
Mungo Martin adzing a totem pole
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin restoring a totem pole originally carved by Charlie James. The pole later stood in Totem Park at UBC before being moved to the Great Hall of the Museum of Anthropology.
Mungo Martin working on a totem pole
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin works on a totem pole, possibly restoring an original by Charlie James.
Mungo Martin in a headdress and button blanket
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin wearing a headdress and button blanket.
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Musqueam house board currently held in the Museum of Anthropology.
Mungo Martin painting a totem pole
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin paints a totem pole.
Mungo Martin and Charles Docherty working on a totem pole
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin and Charles Docherty working on a totem pole. Charles Docherty, a carpenter, was hired as his assistant. The pole in the background was carved by Charlie James and was restored by Mungo Martin. It stood in Totem Park at UBC until it was moved to the Great Hall of the Museum of Anthropology.
Charlie James' totem pole restored
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Charlie James' totem pole after restoration work by Mungo Martin. It is likely standing in Totem Park at UBC in this photograph. It was later moved to the Great Hall in the Museum of Anthropology.
Mungo Martin working on a totem pole
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Mungo Martin working on a totem pole.
Mungo Martin totem poles in Totem Park, UBC
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Two totem poles standing in Totem Park on UBC. The one in the foreground was originally carved by Charlie James. It was later restored by Mungo Martin and Charlie James.