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Found 6,033 items held at Refine Search .
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FROM CARD: "HANDLE CARVED." FROM 19TH OR EARLY 20TH CENTURY EXHIBIT LABEL WITH CARD: "SPOON.---MADE OF GOAT'S HORN. HANDLE ORNAMENTED WITH CARVED TOTEMIC DESIGNS. BOWL RIVETED TO THE HANDLE. LENGTH, 9 1/2 INCHES, WIDTH, 2 3/8 INCHES. TSIMSHIAN INDIANS (TSIMSHIAN STOCK), PORCHER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA. COLLECTED BY JAMES G. SWAN."This object is on loan to the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center, from 2010 through 2027.Source of the information below: Smithsonian Arctic Studies Center Alaska Native Collections: Sharing Knowledge website, by Aron Crowell, entry on this artifact http://www.alaska.si.edu/record.asp?id=524, retrieved 4-24-2012: Spoon, Tsimshian. The handle of this feast spoon, which bears interlocking crest images of a person, bird, and wolf, was carved from mountain goat horn; the bowl is a separate piece of horn that was steamed and press-molded into shape. Several Tsimshian villages were particularly known for the manufacture of horn spoons; others specialized in wooden dishes, carved boxes, yellow cedar blankets, and foods such as soapberries, cranberries, crab apples, and dried salmon.
FROM CARD: "NOT IN COLLECTION."Ian Reid (Heiltsuk) and Clyde Tallio (Nuxalk) of the delegation from Bella Bella, Bella Coola and Rivers Inlet communities of British Columbia made the following comments during the Recovering Voices Community Research Visit May 20th - 24th, 2013. When you use these they are held upside down. We got our rattles from Tsimshaml. Of the image, the creature on the bottom is a sea creature but a lot of people call it a hawk face. It came out of the water upside down and it floated upside down. The tongues are symbolic too, of sharing languages or dialects with the creatures and also sharing power with the breath of life. Only chiefs use these rattles, they can be carved out of alder, yew or maple wood. When you carve red cedar you have to follow the grain.
FROM CARD: "EX[changed?]. REV. J.C.C. BEWTON 1/26/95."
HAS CATALOG CARD.