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This information was automatically generated from data provided by MOA: University of British Columbia. It has been standardized to aid in finding and grouping information within the RRN. Accuracy and meaning should be verified from the Data Source tab.

Description

Large round mask with high relief face and features. Round eyes, opened mouth. Tear drops from the eyes. Painted in "Bella Coola blue", ochre, red and black. The edges have holes and are unpainted, where it used to attach behind a large round wooden corona.

History Of Use

Sun mask; Sinxolatla is one of the names for the Nuxalk sun, who is a supernatural being.

Narrative

Purchased from Davenport Clayton in 1959. Collected by his parents while operating a store in Bella Coola between 1890 and 1910. Previously thought to be a moon mask, however, recently this mask was discovered to have once had a large, round corona attached to it, so it is most likely a sun mask. Harlan I. Smith photographed the corona attached to this mask in the 1920s. The corona is now in the collection of the Seattle Art Museum (SAM) with a different mask inside. It is unknown how the original mask and corona became separated, but at some point a new mask was nailed into the centre of the corona and the original mask was sold by itself.
The corona was loaned to MOA in early 2012 so that the two pieces could be reunited in an exhibition in MOA's Multiversity galleries from April to September. The MOA mask will then be loaned out to the SAM in the fall of 2012 so the pieces may be exhibited together in Seattle, as well.

Item History

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