Collection
-
Dorsal Fin Pendant
Amy Edgars
SOLDArgillite
This pendant depicts the dorsal fin of a Killerwhale. In Northwest Coast oral tradition, the Killerwhale is a powerful underwater hunter. It is also considered to be the sea manifestation of the land Wolf. Killerwhales are commonly known to mate and guard their family for a lifetime. As a crest symbol, the Killerwhale is associated with family, power, strength, dignity and communication.
-
-
3. Eagle, Killerwhale, Bear & Frog Model Pole
Christian White
Price upon requestArgillite, Catlinite, Abalone shell
Argillite is grey colour and a relatively soft stone to carve which hardens over time as it begins to oxidize once removed from the mine. As it is relatively a limited resource, it is difficult to obtain large pieces from the quarry. Apart from small totem poles like this, the kinds of objects carved from Argillite include plates with carved and incised designs, pendants, pipes, small boxes, and sculptured figures.
-
-
Tsimshian Journey Drum
Henry Green
Price upon requestHide, Acrylic paint
Stand is available at an additional cost
-
-
-
-
Robins State II – Red [Framed]
Susan Point RCA
CA$3,105.00Serigraph, Edition of 50
State 2 of 2
2017
Framed
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Where Air Meets Water: The Eagle and Killerwhale Panel
Corrine Hunt
Price upon requestBone ash, graphite and aluminum composite
Limited edition of 9
Please ask us about custom orders
In this panel design Corrine Hunt has propelled her use of the medium in such a way that she invites a ‘contemporary’ perception of form. The panel is made from a composite of bone ash, graphite, and aluminum; the organic black colour coming from the ash. The panel itself has been cut from a technically controlled machine, and then has been hand-finished and polished to a luminous sheen.
Corrine’s concept for the panel is based upon the physical depiction of air meeting water; a drop of water which creates a swirl as the air affects its surface. The whorl-shape created by this abstract notion has produced the forms of an Eagle, on the upper left side of the panel, and an Orca; it’s body elusively curving around the right side of the panel. Corrine has continued to play with the whirlpool concept by introducing echoing shapes and forms that reflect across the surface of the panel and invite the viewer to explore the “water’s” surface.
In First Nations art and culture, the Eagle is seen as the symbol of status, power, peace, and friendship, whilst the Killerwhale is revered for its powerful hunting ability and is considered to be the sea manifestation of the Wolf. Both in legend and in the wild, the Killerwhale guards its family for a lifetime. Again, the artist is working around the model of “Air meeting Water”, both visually and in her choice of crest figures.
The artist’s intention in her design is to mesmerize the viewer; she combines traditional formlines of the Northwest Coast with the interpretive concepts of post modernism, allowing the eye to move seamlessly and always see something new.
-
-
Sea Eagle Mask
Tom D. Hunt
CA$8,500.00Red Cedar wood, Cedar bark, Acrylic paint
31 x 29 x 13.5″ (including base)
Currently on display at the Fairmont Waterfront Hotel
-
-
-
-
Robins State I – Black
Susan Point RCA
CA$2,280.00Serigraph, Edition of 50
State 1 of 2
2017
Unframed
(For inquiries on custom framing, please contact the gallery)
-
Cod Swallowing the Moon Panel
Joe David
Price upon requestRed Cedar wood, Bronze cast, Acrylic paint
This panel is created from one single piece of Cedar wood, which is a minimum of 500 years old.
-
-
-
Killerwhale Panel
Philip Gray
SOLDRed Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
SOLD – For artist commission inquiries, please contact us at [email protected]
-
Eagle in Flight Pendant
Gary Olver
CA$2,200.00Whale tooth, Abalone shell
For more details on shipping Ivory outside of Canada, please click here and then click open the Shipping section and scroll down to read more on Shipping Restrictions.
-
Crooked Beak, Hok Hok, and Ravens Hamasta Mask
Donald Svanvik
Price upon requestRed Cedar wood, Cedar bark, Acrylic paint
Articulated Mask
-
Eulachon Canoe Mountain [Framed]
Lyle Wilson
CA$715.00Intaglio Print on acid-free paper
Edition of 50
2016
13 x 11.5″ (Paper size)
7 x 5.25″ (Image size)
16.5 x 15 x 1.25″ (framed size)
“My first experience actually seeing traditional carving in situ was fishing eulachon at Kemano. I saw graveyard memorials (ah-aluuch-tin): grey, weather-beaten and somewhat moss-covered, but very impressive in their natural state and site. Although I didn’t know it at the time, it was part of the beginning of my life-long interest in Haisla culture.
The eulachon fish are special to the Haisla people. At Kitamaat, there is a mountain that has a dip in its outline which the Haisla liken to a canoe. When the sun set in this ‘canoe-dip,’ that signaled that the eulachon were about to spawn in the Kitamaat River and all the Haisla eagerly awaited them!
The wildlife that also pursued eulachon was a true natural phenomenon: eagles, seals, sea lions, crows, ravens, seagulls, otters, mink, sawbill ducks, halibut, porpoises, bullheads, and undoubtedly many others one couldn’t see! To represent all of these creatures in one image, a raven, seagull, sea lion and bullhead are shown, each with an eulachon close to their mouths.
The sea gull is important because Haisla history likened the thousands of gulls flying around the estuary of the Kitmaat River to a giant monster’s mouth; therefore, Kitamaat was a place avoided until the first Haisla settled there.
A young Haisla girl sat on the riverbank and watched as a bullhead waited on the river’s bottom and let the current sweep eulachon into its wide mouth. The traditional net (tak-calth) used to fish eulachon also has a wide mouth and also tapers to a narrow end like a bullhead’s body. A bullhead is shown with a net-like pattern on its body, alluding to the tak-calth’s inspiration.”
-Lyle Wilson, 2016
-
-
Eagle Feather Ring
Corrine Hunt
SOLDSterling silver, 14K Yellow Gold, Engraved
Width: 5/16″
Size: 7.75 -
-
Killerwhale Ring
Allen Thompson
CA$210.00Sterling silver, Engraved
Domed, Tapered
Width: 3/8″
Size: 8.75 -
-
-
-
-
Halxinix’ (Orca) Belt Buckle
Lyle Wilson
CA$3,600.00Sterling silver, 18K Yellow Gold, Engraved
Deeply Sculpted -
Nanakwa (Dawn) Belt Buckle
Lyle Wilson
CA$3,400.00Sterling silver, 22K Yellow Gold, Engraved
Deeply Sculpted -
-
-
-
“After the Ancients” Bracelet
Lyle Wilson
Price upon requestSterling silver, Textured, Engraved, Repoussé, Chased
Hinged with Sterling silver Catch
2015“Exploring one’s roots brings a healthy appreciation of one’s place in the scheme of things. The Pacific Northwest Coast (PNC) formline has undergone changes over the passage of time. What I wanted to do was to pay homage to that earlier, cleaner, straightforward, massive look of PNC art because it captures the sense of that era’s time. I learned from what work they left behind and so it impacts the work I do today.
In this bracelet, a mixture of modern techniques – repoussé, chasing, engraving, texturing, fabrication – has been added to a deceptively simple facial image that’s present on early traditional bent-boxes; a face thought to represent a supernatural guardian of any treasures contained within the box.
For me, and for this exhibition, this style of PNC imagery depiction on a bracelet seemed to be something that had a sense of inevitability because I have such admiration and respect for ancient PNC artists”
-Lyle Wilson, 2016
-
Iksduq’iya & Qolun (Eagle & Beaver) Box
Lyle Wilson
Price upon requestSterling Silver, Engraved and Textured on Hollow-ware2015
“My father’s Eagle Clan adopted me, but I was actually born into my mother’s Beaver Clan. Since the Haisla followed a matrilineal system, whereby every child was automatically included into its mother’s clan, my unusual adoption was due to the circumstances of the Eagle Clan having so many of its members die. Due to the early and unfamiliar diseases, everyone feared the clan would eventually become extinct.
I’ve always loved the look of a full-size, traditional wooden bent-box and liked the idea of a smaller, silver box using the same traditional proportions. It adds a unique sculptural look to any small box which, once seen, becomes a more appreciated detail with every subsequent examination. The box’s construction technique is very deceptive; it looks solid but is actually a box-within-a-box, with the hollow spaces between each ‘box’ allowing for visually thicker walls. For this box, I decided to honor my connections to both Haisla Clans – Beaver and Eagle – by engraving each on one-half of the box. The box’s lid has another Eagle engraved on the top, and the Halibut, a sub-crest shared by both clans, is engraved around the edges.”
-Lyle Wilson, 2016
-
Ovoid Origin Sculpture
Lyle Wilson
CA$5,400.00Warlus tusk (Ivory), Yew wood, Abalone shell
For more details on shipping Ivory outside of Canada, please click here and then click open the Shipping section and scroll down to read more on Shipping Restrictions.
-
-
-
-
35. Raven and His Family Mask
Ben Davidson
Price upon requestCast Forton, Aluminum paint, simulated “Gun Metal” patina finish
Limited Edition of 9
Cast Forton is suitable for both outdoor and indoor display.
-
The Swimmers Pin/Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$4,000.00Platinum, Abalone shell, Cast, Engraved, Textured
Edition 14/14
2001 -
Qolun (Beaver) Pin/Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,000.00Sterling silver, Cast, Engraved, Textured
Edition of 14
2013
“The Beaver was my original clan but I was adopted into my father’s Eagle Clan because it was thought that it might become extinct; many Eagle Clan members died due to having no immunity to early European diseases.
The wild beaver seems to understand an old, but true, Haisla proverb: ‘If you work hard today, you will have plenty tomorrow.’ Or perhaps it was actually my ancestors who came to understand, emulate and respect the working habits of this industrious little animal enough to create the original Haisla Beaver Clan.”
-Lyle Wilson, 2016
-
Thunderbird & Killerwhale Bracelet
Don Lancaster
CA$600.00Sterling silver, Engraved
Blue Paua shell (4 mm) set in Sterling silver Bezel -
-
Ḡax̄ (Raven) Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,200.00Sterling silver, Repousse, Chased, Engraved, Textured
2015
-
Qolun (Beaver) Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,200.00Sterling silver, Repousse, Chased, Engraved, Textured
2015
-
Miya (Fish) Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,200.00Sterling silver, Repousse, Chased, Engraved, Textured
2015
-
“Traditional Symbol” Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,400.00Sterling silver, Repousse, Chased, Engraved, Textured
2015
-
Halx̄inix° (Orca) Pendant
Lyle Wilson
CA$1,600.00Sterling silver, Repousse, Chased, Engraved, Textured
2015
-
-
-
Eagle’s Play Glass Rattle
Susan Point RCA
Price upon requestHand blown glass, Red Cedar wood base
This beautiful contemporary rattle is made with hand-blown glass, an example of Susan Point’s balance between traditional and contemporary styles. It demonstrates her ability to diversify, yet reveals her respect for tradition and ancient mythology. Based on an ancient implement, a spindle whorl was used for spinning wool into yarn for the process of creating fine woolen blankets.
-
-
Eagle Blue Bentwood Box
Philip Gray
SOLDYellow Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
SOLD – For artist commission inquiries, please contact us at [email protected]
-
-
-
-
-
Raven Mask
Donald Svanvik
CA$6,600.00Red Cedar wood, Acrylic Paint, Clothe, Cedar bark
27 x 31 x 10.75″ (including stand)
-
Bear Pendant
Gary Olver
CA$900.00Whale Tooth, Abalone shell
For more details on shipping Ivory outside of Canada, please click here and then click open the Shipping section and scroll down to read more on Shipping Restrictions.
-
-
-
Eagle & Killerwhale Bangle Bracelet
Corrine Hunt
Price upon request14K Yellow Gold, Engraved
Solid Bangle, Heavy Gauge -
-
-
-
-
-
Changing Seasons State I (Dawn)
Susan Point RCA
CA$800.00Serigraph, Edition of 75
State I of II
2015
(For inquiries on custom framing, please contact the gallery)
-
The Chase Bentwood Box
Philip Gray
SOLDRed Cedar wood, Operculum shell, Acrylic paint
SOLD – For artist commission inquiries, please contact us at [email protected]
-
-
Hunters Struggling for a Spear
Thomas Ugjuk
CA$7,175.00Basalt, Antler1973
“A remarkably animated work for the artist whose style is comparable to his father’s (John Kavik). In an interview with the artist in 1993, which appeared in the winter edition of the Inuit Art Quarterly, Ugjuk describes the difficulty he had in deciding what to carve. This may be why there are not many of his works available on the market. Both Kavik and Ugjuk were self-taught artists and took to carving whenever they were not hunting.”
“Ugluk says, ‘I would try to concentrate on an idea of mine and gradually expand on it as I went along which would lead to some comprehensible form for the carving I was working on. And, other times, it seemed that trying to stay with one idea didn’t always work so, rather than getting stuck with one idea, I would just work on a carving and what it would become’.”
-
Man with Seal and Woman Jigging for Fish
Peter Pitseolak
CA$1,100.00Felt tip and Coloured Pencil on cream coloured paper
1902-1973
Unframed
(For inquiries on custom framing, please contact the gallery)
-
-
Reclining Caribou
Joanassie Manning
CA$4,140.00Serpentine, Antler
Dimensions:
20 x 9 x 17″ (including antlers)
8.5 x 3.5 x 16″ (excluding antlers)
-
82. Frog Basket
Isabel Rorick RCA
CA$12,800.00Spruce root, Acrylic paint
Hand-painted by Alfred Adams (Isabel’s brother)
3.25 x 4.5 x 4.5″
Isabel Rorick comes from a long line of weavers, including her great-grandmother Isabella Edenshaw; her grandmother, Selina Peratrovich; her mother, Primrose Adams, and her Aunt, Delores Churchill. Using the Haida language of form, Isabel incorporates many traditional designs into her baskets and hats, like that of the dragonfly, raven’s tail, and spider web or slug trail.
-
Salmon Blanket
Susan Point RCA
CA$800.00Serigraph, Edition of 110
2015
Unframed
(For inquiries on custom framing, please contact the gallery)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Raven & Light Ring
Carmen Goertzen
CA$2,100.0014K White Gold, Cast, Engraved
Heavy Gauge
Width: 1/2″
Size: 7.25 -
-
-
-
-