Collection
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Hummingbird Paddle
Trevor Angus
CA$3,600.00Yellow Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
Custom paddle stands available upon request – please inquire for details
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Raven Paddle
Trevor Angus
CA$3,600.00Yellow Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
Custom paddle stands available upon request – please inquire for details
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Hummingbird Paddle
Trevor Angus
CA$3,600.00Yellow Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
Custom paddle stands available upon request – please inquire for details
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Wolf & Salmon Trout Head Necklace
David Neel
CA$3,600.00Sterling silver, 14K Yellow Gold, Engraved
2 x 1″ (Pendant dimensions)
22″ (Necklace length) -
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Energy Dance Panel [3 Tiles]
Don Yeomans
CA$3,600.00Plaster
Limited edition
9 Tiles in total [available in sets of 3, 6 or 9] – ask us for details.
Plaster is suitable for both outdoor and indoor display.
This extraordinary piece stands as a resplendent tribute to one of the Pacific Northwest Coast’s paramount and revered sources of vitality: the Salmon. Salmon, an integral and indispensable facet of life in this region, has left an indelible imprint on the cultures, interactions, technologies, and spiritual beliefs of the Pacific Northwest Indigenous communities.
“Water gives energy to the salmon.” – Don Yeomans
In this quote, the artist encapsulates the spiritual and life-sustaining essence bestowed upon this remarkable creature. Revered as a gift from the Creator, Salmon transcends its physical form to embody abundance, regeneration, self-sacrifice, and perseverance. The shape of the body allows Salmon to defy gravity as it dances upstream to fulfil its essential role within the cycle of our lives.
This masterpiece skillfully converges nine distinct Salmon into a harmonious whole, thereby creating a symbol of unification that mirrors the interconnectedness of our existence.
Each meticulously rendered Salmon pays homage to the mastery of the artist as well as the intricate dance of life and energy that defines the West Coast Indigenous communities.
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Wasgo, Beaver and Dogfish Box
Gryn White
CA$3,700.00Argillite, Abalone ShellRevered as a great hunter, the Sea Wolf (Wasgo) was often associated with a special spirit power that man had to acquire to become a successful hunter.
Beavers are creative, artistic, determined, and industrious. They generally keep to themselves, but when they do decide to speak, they give wise advice so it is best to listen.
The Dogfish is an important and high-ranking crest figure amongst the matriarchs with the Haida Nation. It is an image most commonly depicted by Haida, Tlingit, Tsimshian and Nisga’a artisans, especially applied to utilitarian objects.
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Eagle & Raven Bentwood Box
Victor Michael West
CA$3,750.00Red Cedar wood, Acrylic paint
Specific and unique to the Northwest Coast People is the bentwood or bent-corner box or container. A most outstanding item of the First Nations people, it is made from one single plank of wood through a lengthy steaming process – a method strictly adopted by the coastal peoples.
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Eagle Paddle
Barry Scow
CA$3,800.00Yellow Cedar wood, Abalone shell
Custom paddle stands available upon request – please inquire for details
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Raven & Human Ladle
Alvin Mack
CA$3,800.00Yellow Cedar wood, Abalone shell, Acrylic paint
3 x 14 x 3.5″
7.5 x 14 x 3.75″ (including stand)
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Sea Hunter Mask
Mathew Esquega
CA$3,800.00Red Cedar wood, Copper, Leather, Horse hair, Feather, Beads, Acrylic paint
18.5 x 11.5 x 10″ (mask only)
26 x 15 x 10″ (including hair)
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Drumming Sedna
Bart Hanna
CA$3,840.00Marble
As goddess of the ocean, Sedna sets strict rules about the proper way to treat the animals of the hunt, which the Inuit require for sustenance. This includes proper treatment of the animals’ spirit when killed for food. If she feels the rules have been broken, she cuts off the supply of food. When this happens, the Inuit tribal shaman is required to take a mystical journey to the bottom of the ocean to speak to the goddess. It is considered the most dangerous journey an Inuit shaman is called upon to make.Upon arrival at the bottom of the sea the shaman is required to comb Sedna’s hair, because Sedna has no fingers to comb it herself, and to find out what the tribe has done wrong that the food has been cut off. The shaman then makes a deal with Sedna, promising that if the tribe corrects whatever transgressions it has made, the goddess will return their food supply. The shaman then returns to the tribe with the list of things the goddess requires to be done to get the food back.
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Raven Headdress
Eugene Alfred
CA$3,950.00Birch wood, Acrylic paint
3.5 x 6 x 10.75″
11 x 6 x 10.75″ (including stand)