- 92-1-a034520
- Stuk
- [ca. 1964 - 1967]
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a partially carved pole being hosed down by carver Doug Cranmer.
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Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a partially carved pole being hosed down by carver Doug Cranmer.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts Doug Cranmer carving a pole using an adze.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a carver, possibly Godfrey Hunt, carving on a totem pole. He is possibly using a file.
Carving the Saint Catherine totem pole
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a man, probably Douglas Cranmer, in the early stages of carving the St. Catherines, Ontario totem pole. The pole is outside. He is preparing to use a chain saw to make the early cuts to a pole. Markings are visible, showing where he will cut.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a small scale totem pole which seems to be situated in a cemetery. The bottom figure seems to be human and the top an eagle.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts carving a canoe outdoors. Both Douglas Cranmer and Godfrey Hunt are pictured working on the Nootka canoe.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts carving a canoe outdoors. Both Douglas Cranmer and Godfrey Hunt are pictured working on the Nootka canoe.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a partially carved canoe outdoors being filled with water from a hose.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts Douglas Cranmer working on a canoe. The canoe is partially filled with water.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a partially completed canoe filled with water.
Interior of a carving workshop
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts an interior room used for carving. Several unfinished projects and woodworking tools are visible.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts Doug Cranmer in the early stages of carving a totem pole.
House Frontal Totem Pole, UBC Totem Park
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a pole carved as the frontal pole for the front of the Haida house, at UBC, for display in Totem Park. Moved to the new Museum of Anthropology grounds in 1978. Pole was removed from the Haida House in 2000-09 and placed in a greenhouse tent for conservation treatment and drying. A new pole was raised outside to replace it (see MOA object Nb1.752). Jim Hart, with Reg Davidson, Michael Nicoll and Tyler Crosby, performed a small informal ceremony for the re-raising of the pole on Oct. 30, 2002 (with Martine Reid in attendance). Pole was then re-raised in the Great Hall of the Museum on Oct. 31, 2002.
Zonder titel
Haida house and mortuary house being reassembled
Part of 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
Part of 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.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Aerial view of Haida House after construction and carvings were complete. The date of the annotation must be incorrect as the double mortuary pole and the house front totem pole were not completed until 1962.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Aerial view of Haida House after construction and carvings were complete. The date of the annotation must be incorrect as the double mortuary pole and the house front totem pole were not completed until 1962.
Doug Cranmer standing on the Haida House
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer guiding a pole into place on the Haida House roof.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Children in a carving class in what appears to be the Haida House at the Museum of Anthropology. The man teaching the class may be Doug Cranmer.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer carving two totem poles at the University of British Columbia.