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Raven Halibut Hook
Artist Unknown (Northern Coastal)
Indigenous artwork on the Pacific Northwest Coast often incorporates figures and animals that are...
Indigenous artwork on the Pacific Northwest Coast often incorporates figures and animals that are related to crest symbols. Crests have been passed down through families and have varying meanings depending on the context and association with a nation, clan, or family. The figures depicted in contemporary Northwest Coast Indigenous artwork also have varying meanings but there are some common characteristics from a range of sources, including oral histories and artist descriptions.Raven is one ...
$3,800.00
Dance Whistle
Rod Smith (Kwakwaka'wakw)
Whistle c. 1930 Painted by Rod Smith This whistle is similar to those housed in the Museum of Ant...
Whistle c. 1930 Painted by Rod Smith This whistle is similar to those housed in the Museum of Anthropology at UBC in Vancouver. For one example that is part of MOA's permanent collection click here.
$1,400.00
Burden Basket
Artist Unknown (Klikitat)
c. 1880To view a similar style Klickitat (Klikitat) burden basket that is housed in the permanent...
c. 1880To view a similar style Klickitat (Klikitat) burden basket that is housed in the permanent collection of the Museum of Anthropology at UBC, click here.
$800.00
Round Lidded Basket
Artist Unknown (Salish)
c. 1925*Note: This basket has First Nations repair.
c. 1925*Note: This basket has First Nations repair.
$1,600.00
Salish Basket
Artist Unknown (Salish)
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of...
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of domestic uses associated with the gathering, storing and cooking of different foods. Similar weaving techniques were also used to make cradles and hats for everyday and ceremonial uses.Most basketry is traditionally woven from long, slender and pliant rootlets of cedar and sometimes spruce, although various grasses are used in some regions. A sharply pointed bone awl is used to split the rootlet ...
$1,800.00
Rectangular Salish Lidded Basket
Artist Unknown (Salish)
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of...
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of domestic uses associated with the gathering, storing and cooking of different foods. Similar weaving techniques were also used to make cradles and hats for everyday and ceremonial uses.Most basketry is traditionally woven from long, slender and pliant rootlets of cedar and sometimes spruce, although various grasses are used in some regions. A sharply pointed bone awl is used to split the rootlet ...
$1,400.00
Round Lidded Basket
Artist Unknown (Salish)
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of...
Traditionally an art practiced only by women, in the past baskets were made for a wide variety of domestic uses associated with the gathering, storing and cooking of different foods. Similar weaving techniques were also used to make cradles and hats for everyday and ceremonial uses.Most basketry is traditionally woven from long, slender and pliant rootlets of cedar and sometimes spruce, although various grasses are used in some regions. A sharply pointed bone awl is used to split the rootlet ...
$1,400.00