Image is of a display of artifacts which appear to be primarily from Northwest Coast cultural groups. Artifacts include wood carvings, kayak paddles, mauls, net or line sinkers, harvesting baskets, and fishing nets. and implements, and ornaments.
Paddles
14 Archival description resultados para Paddles
Image is of a display of artifacts which appear to be primarily from Northwest Coast cultural groups. Artifacts include textiles, woven baskets, kayak paddles, and cooking implements.
Paddles, canoe bailers, and model canoes on display in Montréal for the Museum of Anthropology's Northwest Coast exhibit for "Man and His World".
File contains images of bentwood boxes, cedar hats, and paddles from a private collection.
The file contains images of Northwest Coast artifacts located in unidentified First Nation villages, and in various museums in North America. The artifacts include masks, paddles, carvings, rattles, fishing equipment, and household items such as bowls and spoons. The majority of images from various museums include information about the artifact such as what it is, the museum it's housed in, and the artifact's catalogue number.
Display for the Museum of Anthropology. Uncertain relation to exhibits. Possibly for an Oceania exhibit that may have been in place in 1969. Shows weapons of Pacific island culture, possibly Polynesia.
File contains images of objects made by Captain Carpenter housed at the Museum of Vancouver (known then as the Vancouver Museum).
Display for the museum. Uncertain relation to exhibitions. Displays a model canoe with a decorated paddle visible in the background.
Display for the Museum of Anthropology. Uncertain relation to exhibits. Possibly for an exhibit on Oceania that may have been in place in 1969. Shows several paddles from Oceania.
File mainly contains historical images of Haida and Tlingit villages and totem poles located on the Northwest Coast of British Columbia and Alaska. There are also images of Haida and Tlingit peoples dressed in regalia. Other photos include images of Haida and Tlingit artifacts, such as bentwood boxes and carvings, housed in various museums around the world. There are also images of a modern day ceremony in front of some totem poles and long houses. The textual records include photocopies of images of totem poles and Haida and Tlingit villages.
File contains photographs of a paddle and a bent-wood box. In addition are the supporting textual records, mostly correspondence between McLennan and staff at the Seattle Art Museum.
Image is of a display of artifacts which appear to be primarily from Northwest Coast cultural groups. Artifacts include textiles, woven baskets, kayak paddles, and cooking implements.
Subseries consists of material produced by museum staff, among them Wilson Duff, Harry and Audrey Hawthorn, Marjorie Halpin, and Gloria Cranmer Webster. There is extensive material on Audrey Hawthorn’s Art of the Kwakiutl Indians. Included in this subseries are ca. 2000 photographs which were collected for possible use in this book. Photographs are numbered A38-A17206 with many numbers missing throughout. The majority of photographs are of wooden masks, but they are also of bowls, bentwood boxes, paddles, rattles, totem poles, talking sticks, headdresses and frontlets, wooden figures and miniatures, whistles, spoons, silver bracelets, argillite carvings, button blankets, chilkat blankets, cedar head and neck rings, woodworking tools, stone tools, and fish hooks. Other record forms included in this subseries include correspondence, notes and published materials.
Display for the Museum of Anthropology. Uncertain relation to exhibits. Possibly for an exhibit that may have been in place in 1969. Shows several model boats and sailboats.