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Yaletown
1024 Mainland Street
Vancouver BC
Canada V6B 2T4

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Gastown
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Vancouver BC
Canada V6B 1B6

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Sun + Hol: 11:00am - 6:00pm
After hours: Open by appointment only
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Kwikw Eagle Rattle with Chilkat Face

Kwikw Eagle Rattle with Chilkat Face

Kevin Daniel Cranmer
Kwakwaka’wakw ('Namgis and Mamlilikala Nations)
 

Yellow Cedar wood, Copper, Abalone shells, Acrylic paint


An ode to his cultural history, this beautifully embellished Kwikw Eagle with Chilkat Face Rattle by Kevin Cranmer speaks to both the artist's Kwakwaka'wakw and Tlingit ancestries.

Kwikw, is the Kwak'wala word for Eagle and is figured on the front of this particular rattle. A common icon of wealth and prestige, the Eagle is the ambassador figure of the Northwest Coast.

The chilkat face on the reverse of the rattle references Cranmer's Tlingit heritage. Anisalaga, Cranmer's great-great-great-grandmother, was a Tlingit noblewoman who had direct rights to reproduce highly revered Chilkat designs. It the facial component of the Chilkat design that you see referenced on the back of this rattle.


12 x 4.25 x 5.25"
CAD $1,975.00

No. 3807
CP-Gastown-CG12
All measurements height x width x depth

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Kevin Daniel Cranmer, Kwakwaka’wakw ('Namgis and Mamlilikala Nations)
 

Kwakwaka'wakw artist Kevin Cranmer was born in Alert Bay, British Columbia, but has lived all but four years of his life in Victoria. His father is from the 'Namgis Nation and his mother is from the Mamlilikala Nation, two of the many Nations of the Kwakwaka'wakw people. Cranmer's work often speaks to his diverse coastal background, as he can trace his ancestry to the many Nations of Kwakwaka'wakw people as well as the Tlingit of Alaska. 

His formal instruction came under the tutelage of his cousin, George Hunt Jr. He later worked with artists Tony Hunt Sr., Tony Hunt Jr., and Calvin Hunt. Kevin’s introduction to larger monumental sculpture began when he first started to work alongside renowned Nuu-Chah-Nulth artist, Tim Paul in Thunderbird Park at the Royal British Columbia Museum. Thus, his large-scale works include several large co-operative projects: a 40 foot pole which stands in Stanley Park, Vancouver; a 36 foot pole carved for the closing ceremonies at the 1990 Commonwealth Games in Auckland, New Zealand and an elaborately carved and painted Chief’s seat for the newly rebuilt Big House in Alert Bay.

Kevin Cranmer is an active participant in the continuation of his cultural heritage through the arts. He is a respected member of his community and is an intiated Hamatsa member, one of the most sacred of the complex and secret dance socities of the Kwakwaka'wakw. His artistic works not only display unique Kwakwaka’wakw traditions but also preserve those traditions for future generations. Kevin Cranmer continues to create pieces for family and for use in ceremony.

Exhibitions:

2012 Cranmer + Gray, Duel Artist Exhibition at Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery. Vancouver, BC.

2007 Coastal Legacy, Group Exhibition at Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery. Vancouver, BC.

2006 Transcendance - A Decade In Perspective, Group Exhibition at Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery. Vancouver, BC.

2005 Where the Spirits Gather, Group Exhibition at Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery. Vancouver, BC. 

2005 Totems to Turqoise: Native North American Jewelry Arts of the Northwest and Southwest,  Group Exhibition at American Museum of Natural History. New York, USA. 

2004 Box of Treasures, Group Exhibition at Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery. Vancouver, BC.