Crest Frontlet
1850-1875
Haida
Arts of the Americas
Animals indigenous to the Northwest Coast region play prominent roles in this group of objects. Rattles were part of chiefs’ ceremonial dance regalia; the Tsimshian example depicts a shaman touching tongues with a frog as he rides on the back of a raven with another frog in its mouth. The clapper by the Haida artist Charles Edenshaw takes the form of a halibut with the face of the fish’s spirit represented on the tail. The Haida frontlet, which would have been attached to a headdress, represents a raven emerging from the mouth of a whale. The Tlingit soul catcher, of a type used by shamans to capture and protect people’s souls during healing ceremonies, depicts a whale with a fin rising from the center of its back.
- Maker/Artist
- Haida
- Classification
- Clothing
- Formatted Medium
- Wood, abalone shell, pigment
- Locations
- Place collected: Alert Bay, British Columbia, Canada
- Dimensions
- 7 x 5 3/4 x 2 1/4 in. (17.8 x 14.6 x 5.7 cm)
- Departments
- Arts of the Americas
- Accession Number
- L52.3
- Credit Line
- Anonymous loan
- Exhibitions
- The Guennol Collection: Cabinet of Wonders, Climate in Crisis: Environmental Change in the Indigenous Americas
- Rights Statement
- Creative Commons-BY
- Museum Location
- Arts of the Americas Galleries, 5th Floor
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