painting
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV016.14.1
- Description
- Painting by Indigenous artist, Roy Hanuse titled "Thunderbird".
- This West Coast First Nations style painting was done on a manilla card stock folder and mounted on a black mat board. Painting consists of an underdrawing done in graphite and painted with red, black, green, blue and yellow gouache or tempera paint with some portions painted in a blue glossy paint.
- Handwritten title above painting reads "THUNDERBIRD"; painting is signed by the artist "ROY HANUSE".
- Object History
- Drawings were created in the early 1970s by Roy James Hanuse who was a Kwakwaka'wakw artist known for working in the traditional Kwakwaka'wakw style. Roy was born in 1943 in Bella Bella and lived at Rivers Inlet (Owikeno), British Columbia. Largely self-taught, Roy became interested in his cultural heritage while attending school in Alert Bay in the 1950s. Roy began painting in 1966 and wood carving in 1968. Some highlights of his art career included selling four paintings to the University of British Columbia which were later published in Audrey Hawthorn's "Kwakiutl Art Book" (1979) and carving a 12-foot totem for the Denver Art Museum (1972) and two totem poles that he carved for the Montreal Olympics (1976). Roy James Hanuse died in 2007.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Art
- Object Term
- Painting
- Colour
- Black
- Blue
- Green
- Red
- Yellow
- Measurements
- Overall measurements: wth 39 cm by ht 45 cm
- Maker
- Roy James Hanuse
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- School/Style
- Coast Salish
- Culture
- Kwakwaka'wakw
- Subjects
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia - Art
- Names
- Hanuse, Roy James
- Oakalla Prison Farm
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painting
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV016.14.2
- Description
- Painting by Indigenous artist, Roy Hanuse titled "Killer Whale"
- This West Coast First Nations style painting was done on a manilla card stock file folder and mounted on a black mat board. Painting consists of an underdrawing done in graphite and painted with red, black and green gouache or tempera paint.
- Handwritten title above painting reads "KILLER WHALE"; painting is signed by the artist "ROY HANUSE".
- Object History
- Drawings were created in the early 1970s by Roy James Hanuse who was a Kwakwaka'wakw artist known for working in the traditional Kwakwaka'wakw style. Roy was born in 1943 in Bella Bella and lived at Rivers Inlet (Owikeno), British Columbia. Largely self-taught, Roy became interested in his cultural heritage while attending school in Alert Bay in the 1950s. Roy began painting in 1966 and wood carving in 1968. Some highlights of his art career included selling four paintings to the University of British Columbia which were later published in Audrey Hawthorn's "Kwakiutl Art Book" (1979) and carving a 12-foot totem for the Denver Art Museum (1972) and two totem poles that he carved for the Montreal Olympics (1976). Roy James Hanuse died in 2007.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Art
- Object Term
- Painting
- Colour
- Black
- Green
- Red
- Measurements
- Overall measurements: wth 42.5 cm by ht 29.3 cm
- Maker
- Roy James Hanuse
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- School/Style
- Coast Salish
- Culture
- Kwakwaka'wakw
- Subjects
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia - Art
- Names
- Hanuse, Roy James
- Oakalla Prison Farm
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Album page
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV005.54.745
- Description
- Album page with two advertisement pages; col.; glossy; (may be from a program); page on the left includes a photograph of Chief Dan George with text reading: "The day we joined / A Confederation Celebration / Empire Stadium Vancouver, B.C. / July 20th. 1971"; page on the right reads: "Burnaby Salutes Centennial '71 / with Pioneer Village in Century Park / ... Burnaby Centennial '71 Committee"; recto. of eage page includes a printed advertisement
- Object History
- Album page 217 from Don Copan album/scrapbook for Burnaby Centennial '71 celebrations
- Don Copan was an active member of the Burnaby Centennial ’71 Committee and later became the founding President of the Century Park Museum Association. While a member of the Burnaby Centennial ’71 Committee, Don created a scrapbook album of photographs and ephemera documenting the Burnaby Centennial ’71 Committee’s involvement in celebrating British Columbia’s Centenary of Confederation between January and December 1971 including Burnaby’s Commemorative Project – Heritage Village (Burnaby Village Museum).
- Reference
- Photographs from the Don Copan scrapbook/album are described as part of the Donald Copan collection - Copan Album series
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Advertising Media
- Object Term
- Advertisement
- Subjects
- Celebrations - Centennials
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia
- Names
- Burnaby Centennial '71 Committee
- Burnaby Village Museum
- George, Chief Daniel "Dan"
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