Clapper in Form of a Fish with Human Head for Finger Lever
Charles Edenshaw
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.
MEDIUM
Cedar wood, pigment
DATES
pre–1864
INSCRIPTIONS
Written on object: "from Beasley Collection, H.M.S. Grewler, 1864."
ACCESSION NUMBER
L61.3.1
CREDIT LINE
Collection of Christopher B. Martin
CATALOGUE DESCRIPTION
Carved wood clapper in the form of a halibut with the face of the fish’s spirit represented on the tail.
Condition: good.
MUSEUM LOCATION
This item is not on view
CAPTION
Charles Edenshaw (Haida, 1834–1924). Clapper in Form of a Fish with Human Head for Finger Lever, pre–1864. Cedar wood, pigment, 9 3/4 x 2 3/4 in. (24.8 x 7.0 cm). Collection of Christopher B. Martin, L61.3.1. Creative Commons-BY (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, L61.3.1_transp5628.jpg)
IMAGE
overall, L61.3.1_transp5628.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph
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RIGHTS STATEMENT
Creative Commons-BY
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