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British Columbia Room Totem Poles Heritage Property Plaque, 2020.  

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7350 × 4650 pixels (34.18 MP)

62.2 cm × 39.4 cm @ 300 PPI

3.9 MB

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Resource details

Resource ID

8191

Access

Open

Address

100 Front St W, Toronto, ON M5J 1E3

Date of Creation

2020

Historical Themes

Architectural ​Heritage
Indigenous ​Heritage
Law ​and ​Justice
Visual ​Arts

Program Category

Plaques

Time Period

Pre-​colonization
1615-​1793
1794-​1834
1835-​1899
1900-​1953
1954-​1998

Caption

British Columbia Room Totem Poles Heritage Property Plaque, 2020.

Description

This room contains eight totem poles designed by artist Arthur Price (1918–2008) in 1958. Totem poles are specific to several Pacific Northwest Coast First Nations. Some of the earliest carving communities are the Haida, Kwakwaka’wakw, Nuxalk, Tlingit, and Tsimshian. The carvings commemorate ancestors, show lineage, define rights, and depict notable events. Totem poles and Canada have a complicated history. “Totem” is derived from an Anishinaabemowin word that has become commonly used in place of the many local Indigenous terms for the carvings. Between 1885 and 1951, federal laws banned Pacific Northwest Coast communities from gathering and raising totem poles. During this time it became common for non-Indigenous artists, such as Price, to create art in their style — a practice now widely recognized to be culturally insensitive. These totem poles are reinterpretations of oral traditions and historic events. Notable Northwest Coast carvers include Charles Edenshaw (c. 1839–1920), Nakapankam (Mungo Martin, 1879–1962), and Iljuwas (Bill Reid, 1920–1998).

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