Found 6,033 items held at Refine Search .
Found 6,033 items held at Refine Search .
The item search helps you look through the thousands of items on the RRN and find exactly what you’re after. We’ve split the search into two parts, Results, and Search Filters. You’re in the results section right now. You can still perform “Quick searches” from the menu bar, but if you’re new to the RRN, click the Search tab above and use the exploratory search.
View TutorialLog In to see more items.
Has movable parts.
Provenience note: many objects in the Chirouse collection were catalogued as Duwamish, however that really only seems to definitively apply to Catalogue No. 130965. Accession record indicates that the collection is the "handiwork of the Snohomish, Swinomish, Lummi, Muckleshoot and Etakmur Indians on the Tulalip Reservation in Washington Territory".
FROM CARD: "2ND HEADRING OF NINALAADGIGORS. ILLUS. IN USNM REPT, 1895; FIG. 130; P. 485."
From card: "S. E. Alaska (Tlingit?). Quilled (geometric pattern) shoulder decoration - slight red paint decoration. Orig. No. 1228?" Stored Tlingit.
The object name for catalog numbers E20736-20742 was previously recorded as: "Carving Wooden Dish Frog". This is due to the fact that the objects within this range share a single catalog card, where the description (carving wooden dish frog) only corresponds to the first object (E20734) in the series. When the catalog information was entered into the database, the object name was recorded as the same for each, despite the fact that each catalog number is representative of different, separate objects. At some point, a new catalog card was created for E20742. The other records were updated when digital images were attached to the catalog records.On exhibit in NMNH Sant Ocean Hall. 2014 exhibit caption identifies this as salmon-boy carving, Tlingit.
From card: "Carved in high relief. Represents the land otter. Exhibit Hall 9, 1987. Identified in exhibit as Shaman's Mask - The Spirit of the Land Otter Man, Tlingit. Illus.: Hndbk. N. Amer. Ind., Vol. 7, Northwest Coast, Fig. 7, pg. 614."