(Replica) Haida house front and poles #14, 15, 16 + 17, Thunderbird Park, Victoria, B.C.
- 134-a040089c
- Item
- 9 Aug. 1972
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
61 resultados com objetos digitais Mostrar resultados com objetos digitais
(Replica) Haida house front and poles #14, 15, 16 + 17, Thunderbird Park, Victoria, B.C.
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
(Replicas)?, mortuary poles (Haida), dwelling house and sea wolf, Totem Park, UBC, Vancouver
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
MOA Object ID numbers correspond to poles in the image from left to right.
A50030 carved by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer (1961-62) as the frontal pole for the front of the Haida house, at the University of British Columbia, 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. Pole was then re-raised in the Great Hall of the Museum on Oct. 31, 2002.
Kwakiutl house frame #4, Totem Park, UBC, Vancouver
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
UBC Totem Park – (Sea-Lion and Thunderbird House) c. 1900 Knight Inlet. No longer on display. Now in storage at MOA.
(Replica)? Haida dwelling house, Totem Park, UBC, Vancouver
Parte 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.
Frog house replica, K-san, B.C.
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Feast house replica, K-san, B.C.
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Totems and house at Totem Bite [Bight], Ketchikan, Alaska
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
House front, Totem Bite [Bight], Ketchikan, Alaska
Parte de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing a landscape with a river in the foreground and mountains in the background. A single house is in the centre. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a <i>dak</i> is referred to as being "a post system by means of transport relays of horses stationed at intervals along a route or network, carrying mail and passengers". A dak bungalow refers to a lodging house, typically one story with a large verandah, along a dak route.
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing a house situated in a forest.
The back of our [Parker's] house in Yutang
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a negative showing snow covered houses surrounded by picket fence. There is a mountain in the background.
Vera (Kamchi) and Minnie, Yutang 1923
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a negative showing a two women, Vera Kamchi and Minnie Parker, standing in front of a tall wooden fence. The fence is in front of a large house with snow on the roof. There is a mountain covered in snow in the background.
Building with a snow covered roof, Yutang
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a negative of a one story building covered in snow. There is a mountain with trees in the background.
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph of a garden with a house-like structures in the background.
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing three houses with a snow-caped mountain behind.
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing a stone house with thatched roof with an out building to the left.
View of houses built against a hillside
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing houses built on the hillside.
View of houses built against a hillside
Parte de Eric Parker fonds
Item is a photograph showing houses built on the hillside.
House frame near water, seen from above
Parte de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Ninstints, 1957, house remains
Parte de Harry B. Hawthorn fonds