• Results (15,407)
  • Search

Item 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 Tutorial

Log In to see more items.

Basket1997.22.1

Bequest of Kathleen Ban.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root and beargrass
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Octopus Bag91.95.80

The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.

Culture
Wasco
Material
leather, glass bead, shell bead and yarn
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Hat91.95.53

The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root, grass and natural dye
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basket91.95.38

This basket is a round-walled variety of the Washo fancy basket (it is called degikup). The design on the basket is organized by a meandering band of patterns known as matcati le'lup (arrowhead opposed), referring to the triangles on the corners of the zigzag band. This band isolates large open areas that are filled with free-floating designs: eight-pointed stars, checkerboard diamonds, and notably, a standing figure with a hat and large hands.

Culture
Maidu
Material
willow, redbud, brackenfern root and grass
Made in
California, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basket91.95.34

The Pomo are seven distinct cultural groups that historically occupied the California coast from south of the Russian River northward to the Fort Bragg area and inland to the region around Clear Lake. Although the Pomo made a variety of baskets, they are best known for finely coiled baskets such as these. The basket on the left is constructed with a three-coil foundation. The woven designs on Pomo baskets are usually geometric; figurative designs are rare. Pomo weavers often add feathers and clam shell beads as further ornamentation. The dark plumes are quail topknots, frequently used as accents around the basket rims. The red feathers, from the acorn woodpecker, are very fine; each tuft on the basket is made of several feathers that have been twisted together.

Culture
Pomo
Material
willow, sedge root, bulrush root, cotton string, clamshell bead, quail feather and woodpecker feather
Made in
California, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Spoon91.95.3

The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.

Culture
Haida
Material
silver metal
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Totem Model90.16

Gift of Mr. Donald W. Johnson.

Culture
Haida
Material
argillite
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Killer Whale Mask89.52.27

Large masks, with articulated elements designed to add to the dramatic effect of the mask when it is used in a dance, are characteristic of the Kwagiutl. The dancer can manipulate the fins and mouth on this mask so that the whale would appear to be swimming.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, paint, cloth and string
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Halibut Hook89.52.19

The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
wood
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Huxwhukwamł (Mask of the Huxwhukw)89.52.2

The huxwhukw, or mythical Raven, represents one of the supernatural associates of Baxwbakwalanuksiwe’, the cannibal spirit, which appears in the form of birdlike masks in the tseyka, or red cedar-bark ceremony. These masks are commissioned as part of the inherited privilege of being a hamat’sa society initiate. The masks and the dances in which they are worn pacify and tame the hamat’sa, who personifies the cannibal spirit and the insatiable nature of life, and who ultimately exhibits the honored behavior of a high-ranking person. The articulated beaks clap dramatically during a performance, accompanied by the dancers’ characteristic cries.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
red cedar wood, paint, feather, raffia and dye
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record