Ninstints (?), totem pole or house post
- 51-01-35-a039831
- Item
- 1957
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
346 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
Ninstints (?), totem pole or house post
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Ninstints (?), totem pole or house post
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Ninstints 1957 [shoreline seen from forest]
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Ninstints (?), view from forest
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Ninstints 1957 [view from forest]
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Poles in grass, Queen Charlotte Islands 1951
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Q CH IS 1951 [Queen Charlotte Islands]
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Old totem poles in grass [Haida Gwaii?]
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Port Clements pier, Haida Gwaii
Parte deHarry B. Hawthorn fonds
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Image of several house frontal totem poles at Ninstints on Anthony Island. The totem pole in the foreground is recognizable as one that was transferred to the Museum of Anthropology in 1954. While the others likely were as well, they are more difficult to identify.
Haida mortuary poles at SGang Gwaay Llanagaay
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Series of Haida Mortuary poles from SGang Gwaay photographed by Charles F. Newcombe in 1901. The third pole from the left was taken down in 1957 and held at the University of British Columbia and the Museum of Anthropology. In 2009 it was taken down from the Great Hall in the Museum of Anthropology and placed into massive carving storage in preparation for repatriation to the Haida nation.
Haida mortuary poles at SGang Gwaay Llanagaay
Parte deMOA General Media collection
Series of Haida Mortuary poles from SGang Gwaay photographed by Charles F. Newcombe in 1901. The third pole from the left was taken down in 1957 and held at the University of British Columbia and the Museum of Anthropology. In 2009 it was taken down from the Great Hall in the Museum of Anthropology and placed into massive carving storage in preparation for repatriation to the Haida nation.