• Results (19,248)
  • 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.

Kulos - Baby Thunderbird2004-2/235

Spirit of the Ancestors-The dancer cocks the Kolus head to one side, slowly sweeping its piercing eye across the house, then tilts and reverses his swing as the song describes the Kolus, calling it Screecher Mask. - Bill Holm

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, paint, cedar bark, feather, copper ore metal and string
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Mask2004-2/233

The paint is dark green, light green, and red.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, paint, cedar bark, copper ore metal and string
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Spout | Oolichan rendering | Model2.5E1518
Copper25.0/300

These shield-shaped objects made of commercial copper represent monetary wealth. As coppers are bought and sold by chiefs, their value increases, sometimes to the equivalent of thousands of dollars. They are displayed on ceremonial occasions, and exchanged at noble marriages. Sometimes during quarrels, pieces were cut from them and publicly given to the offender. That person was then obliged in turn to break a copper to protect his own name. The most valuable coppers have been cut and patched many times.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
copper ore metal
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Round Rattle25.0/290

Round rattles similiar to nothern shamans' rattles are shaken by the attendents of the Hamatsa dancers to help tame them of their wildness. Raven rattles are chiefs' rattles used from Vancouver Island to Southeast Alaska. Headdress dancers use them in the Tlasula.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, copper metal, string and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Box | Oolichan rendering | Model2.5E1517
Drum | Beater/Rattle1992-7/1

The dye is red. The paint is red, green, gold, white, and black. The fur is rabbit.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
yellow cedar wood, rawhide hide, leather, rope, hemp, dye, abalone shell, copper metal, paint, gold, fur, rabbit, horse hair, bone and cord
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Ring (Jewelry)1-2178
Spoon2.5E551
Horn Spoon25.0/294

This broad-bowled ladle appears to be of sheep horn. The bowl and shank of the handle have been worked very thin and shaped by steaming and bending. The finial of the handle is left with its natural curve and carved to represent a bear-like creature and a bird. Both have eyes of abalone shell. (Holm, Crooked Beak of Heaven, 1972)

Culture
Northwest Coast
Material
sheep horn, shell and silver metal
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record