Totem poles
Black and white image of a totem pole at Prospect Point in Stanley Park. Though totem poles are commong to the Coastal First Nations of British Columbia, the three First Nations (Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh) who claim Stanley Park as their ancestral land were not represented in Stanley Park with this cultural art form until the summer of 2008.
Black and white image of a totem pole at Prospect Point in Stanley Park. Though totem poles are common to the Coastal First Nations of British Columbia, the three First Nations (Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh) who claim Stanley Park as their ancestral land were not represented in Stanley Park with this cultural art form until the summer of 2008.
Black and white image of five totem poles. Though totem poles are common to the Coastal First Nations of British Columbia, the three First Nations (Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh) who claim Stanley Park as their ancestral land were not represented in Stanley Park with this cultural art form until the summer of 2008.
Image of several totem poles and buildings.
Black and white image of a Thunderbird totem pole at Alert Bay.
Black and white image of man standing beside a totem pole in Alert Bay, British Columbia.
Black and white image of the First Nations village of Kyuquot on the northern west coast of Vancouver Island. Kyuquot is the northernmost village of the fourteen Nuu-chah-nulth First Nation bands.
Black and white image of a totem pole at Capilano Suspension Bridge, parts of which have been coloured in on print.












