Found 400 items held at Refine Search .
Found 400 items held at Refine Search .
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Horn spoon, the bowl and handle made separately and riveted together by copper rivets, elaborately decorated with conventionalised animals, totemic figures, etc. carved in the round on the handle and engraved on the back of the bowl.; Good
Two trolling fish hooks with bone points lashed on with bark, both have long and flexible shafts made from whalebone. A) has a slightly curved shaft.; Good.These two fishhooks would have been used for catching spring salmon or cod. They both have antler points, which are attached with bark to the baleen shafts.Exhbited: On loan to'Arctic Ambitions: Captain Cook and the Northwest Passage', at the Anchorage Museum, Alaska, 27 March- 7 September 2015; and the Washington State Historical Museum Tacoma/Seattle 16 October- 10 January 2016
Limited edition serigraph by Robert Davidson titled 'I am You and You are Me', 2008. Edition: 103/131. Inscribed, signed and dated by the artist, though the title is omitted from the actual print. A hand-shaped blindstamp is visible in the bottom left corner. Condition: Very good.
Limited edition serigraph by Robert Davidson titled 'Looking at Asymmetry', 2001. Edition: 35/111. Inscribed signed and dated by the artist. The bottom right hand corner displays a hand shaped blindstamp. Condition: Very good, small crease near to right edge.
Etching and lithograph by Lyle Wilson titled 'Ode to Billy Holm... Lalooska Duane Pasco... Johnathon Livingston Seagull', 1980. Edition: Artist's proof (Remarque 1/1). Inscribed, signed and dated by the artist. With black string across the top of the print and leaved embedded into the paper. Condition: very good- creases in paper, which appear part of the original process of manufacturing the paper.
Serigraph print by LesLIE (Leslie Robert Sam) titled 'Salmon Eggs', 2005. Edition: artists proof (museum remarque 1/1). Condition: excellent
Print by Sonny Assu titled, 'Live from the Latch', 2012. Edition 27/67. Comes with a certificate signed and dated by the artist. Condition: excellent
The spear throwers are Pacific Eskimo, Chugach (J.C.H.King, Museum of Mankind - 12 1992). The original European tribal names and, where possible, current tribal names have both been given in separate GLT fields.; The throwers added power and distance to small spears or darts used in the hunting of seals, sea otters and whales.; Exhibited: One of the spear throwers B) rests on a Qayaq in the CUMAA new Anthropological displays 1990-. Spear thrower A) was loaned by CUMAA to the Vancouver Centennial Museum May 1986, returned January 1987.; Collected by: Swaine.Admiral.Spelman in 1794. Literature: Also see the 'Catalogue of the Northwest Coast Collection: Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology' (1996), Dr Gillian Crowther. (J.Tanner, May 1998). King (1994) notes that he found only one North American record relating to a spear (dart) thrower in the Wisbech Museum records. Although there are three others mentioned as 1851.96.3-5, their provenance is given as Hawaiian. (J.Tanner, December 1998). See 'From Pacific Shores: Eighteenth-century Ethnographic Collections at Cambridge - The Voyages of Cook, Vancouver and the First Fleet' (J. Tanner, 1999:77). See 'Artificial Curiosities from the Northwest Coast of America (J.C.H. King, 1981: cf. Monochrome Plate 25; 21). Vancouver Collection: George Vancouver (1758-1798) was born in King' s Lynn, Norfolk. His father, John Jasper Vancouver was assistant collector of customs at King's Lynn, which was at that time a busy seaport. It is believed that through his connections he was able to bring George to the attention of Captain James Cook, who was then preparing to sail on the second of his world voyages. Thus George entered the Royal Navy in 1771 upon receiving an appointment from Cook and thereby gained a rigorous training in seamanship. In 1791 Vancouver was sent on a mission to receive the surrender of the Spanish post at Nootka Sound in present day British Columbia, to survey the coast of the American Northwest, and to search for a water connection to the eastern part of the continent. He wrote a lengthy account of his voyage entitled, ' A Voyage of discovery to the North Pacific ocean, and Round the World' (1798). It was on this latter voyage that Spelman Swaine accompanied Vancouver and acquired the objects held at UCMAA. Spelman Swaine was born on 1st January 1769 at Lynn Regis in Norfolk and died on 13th January 1848 at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. His forebears had risen from the ranks of yeoman farmers to gain land in the village of Leverington and build Leverington Hall about 1640, which was held by the family until the end of the 18th century. Swaine himself was brought up at Swanns, another mansion in Leverington, but later moved to Wisbech. He began his naval career in April 1782 and by the October he saw action as midshipman on the ' Recovery' in Lord Howe' s relief of Gibraltar. Thereafter, he lead an eventful and distinguished naval career, finally gaining the rank of Rear Admiral in 1846. In particular, the Swaine collection at UCMAA originates from his period with Captain George Vancouver' s expedition round the world between 1791 and 1795 on the HMS Discovery, as midshipman and later lieutenant. Swaine and his family gave a small but important collection from this voyage to Wisbech Museum, which were later acquired by UCMAA. (J. Tanner, 1999). 'Exhibited: B: On display on top of the kayak in the Maudslay Hall, 1990-2012'
Framed and mounted for the exhibition Gifts Discoveries, but not glazed. Stored in frame.
Limited edition print 86/99, Mirror Images by Coast Salish artist Susan Point, showing two decorated paddles end to end.