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Black Eagle

Black Eagle is located outdoors on the 4000 level of the AQ. This photo shows the canoe shortly after it arrived at 間眅埶AV Burnaby. Image courtesy 間眅埶AV Creative Services
Black Eagle at Canadian Museum of History, ca. 1988. Photo courtesy Harry Foster.
Black Eagle Canoe and Haida paddlers in English Bay, 2006. Photo Courtesy R.A. Badger.

Title/Date: The Black Eagle Canoe, 1987
Artist: Bill Reid
Culture/Language Group: Haida                       
Media: Fiberglass, wood, metal
Credit Line: Donated by Charles and Gayle Pancerzewski, 間眅埶AVs Bill Reid Collection
Location: AQ 4000 level, northeast corner 

Context

The dugout canoe is an integral part of Northwest Coast society. In addition to being a means for fishing and gathering food, trade, and transport, these canoes represent a sophisticated art form, and stand as a symbol of cultural identity.

Based on their centrality in some of the earliest oral histories in the region (which can be traced back 10,000 years), the canoe is arguably one of the most important physical manifestation of Northwest Coast culture. The canoe is also a spiritual vessel, which garners great respect. The hulls are constructed of once-living trees that survived centuries and sustained the lives of innumerable birds, insects, mammals and other plants. Blessed at each step of their transformation and hardened by the forces of fire and water, Northwest Coast canoes come to represent entire clans and communities. Canoes are also a vessel of knowledge, as they represent the skill and precision of craftsmen and carvers who transformed mighty trees into seagoing vessels without the tools or technological advances that are relied upon today. 

Bill Reid expressed great admiration for the traditional Haida Canoe and what it represents visually, symbolically, and culturally. For Expo 86 Reid, assisted by Guujaaw and Simon Dick, carved Loo Taas (Wave Eater), a 50-foot canoe born from a 750-year-old cedar log, the first of its kind on the Northwest Coast in over 100 years. Reid went on to make four full-scale fiberglass replicas of Loo Taas, two of which he painted to represent the main social groupings of the Haida. He called them the Red Raven and the Black Eagle.  

Additional information

The Black Eagle canoe is one of four 1987 reproductions of Loo Taas. They were fabricated by Martin Yachts Ltd. of Richmond, B.C. from a mould designed by Bill Reid. William Reid, Ltd.  then bought the canoes, added Bill Reid design elements, and sold two of them to the Canadian Museum of Civilization. Black Eagle was operated by the Canadian Museum of Civilization for several summers on the Ottawa River.

Through the generous donations of Charles and Gayle Pancerzewski, the Black Eagle canoe has been added to the Bill Reid Collection at 間眅埶AV, and is now proudly displayed at 間眅埶AVs Burnaby Campus.

Sources

  • Neel, David. The Great Canoes: Reviving a Northwest Coast Tradition. 1995. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas and McIntyre. Print.  
  • Reid, Martine J. Bill Reid and the Haida Canoe. 2011. Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing. Print.
  • The Bill Reid Centre. Northwest Coast Canoes.  2011. Web. 

Haida Art

  • Augaitis, Daina. Raven Traveling: Two centuries of Haida Art. 2006. Seattle/Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery. Print.
  • MacDonald, George F.. Haida Art. 1999. Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre. Print.           
  • MacDonald, George F.. Haida Monumental Art: Villages of the Queen Charlotte Islands. 1983. Vancouver : UBC Press. Print.
  • Wright, Robin, Diana Augaitis, Robert Davidson and James Hart. Charles Edenshaw. 2013. London: Black Dog Publishing. Print.

Bill Reid

  • Duffek, Karen and Charlotte Townsend-Gault.  Bill Reid and Beyond. 2004. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. Print.
  • Reid, Bill. Solitary Raven: Selected Writings of Bill Reid. 2000. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. Print
  • Shadbolt, Doris. Bill Reid. 1989. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. Print
  • Steltzer, Ulli. The Spirit of Haida Gwaii: Bill Reids Masterpiece. 1997. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre. Print
  • The Bill Reid Foundation. The Ravens Call. 2010. Web.