Pipe Item Number: 1891.91 from the MAA: University of Cambridge

Description

Elaborately carved stone pipe. Although the catalogue card states, representing human and animal figures , there are no such figures. Rather the representations appear to be of pulleys, rope, and blocks and tackle from a ship' s rigging (G.Crowther); Good

Context

The original European tribal names and, where possible, current tribal names have both been given in separate GLT fields. The Annual Report 1892.69 states A stone pipe, finely carved (human animal figures), and a necklace made of small shells. The necklace appears to have been misplaced (G.Crowther).; The style and subject matter of this object conforms to those of the Second Period of argillite carving, 1830 -1865. This was the time when the Haida confidently depicted aspects of European culture created in a uniquely Haida medium and expressed with the characteristic detail of observation. The types of objects are ship pipes, European standing figures, western tableware, flutes and trade pipes. (The time periods of argillite carving are derived from Carol Sheehan' s Pipes That Won' t Smoke; Coal That Won' t Burn; Haida Sculpture in Argillite, 1981, Glenbow Museum: Calgary, and Peter Macnair and Alan Hoover' s The Magic Leaves, 1984, British Columbian Provincial Museum: Victoria); Exhibited: CUMAA old exhibition, taken from display case 30, dismantled 19081986.; Collected by: ?Brady.G