Title and statement of responsibility area
Title proper
Lyle Wilson fonds
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- Textual record
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Fonds
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Physical description area
Physical description
1 cm of textual records
16 photographs : color ; 13 x 9 cm
1 poster
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Archival description area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Lyle Wilson, a Haisla artist, was born in 1955 at Butedale, British Columbia. He grew up in the northern coastal communities of Kitimat and Kitimat Village. Wilson grew up watching his uncle, Sam Robinson, create carvings out of wood, and he later became a skilled carver and artist himself. In his explorations of art, Wilson brings together his fine-arts training and knowledge of Western European art history with his understanding of Haisla art and tradition and experiments with a range of media. In addition to the carvings he creates out of wood, horn and ivory, Wilson also creates metalwork, jewelry, drawings, and paintings.
Wilson attended the Emily Carr School of Art and Design and the University of British Columbia in the 1980s, where he was educated in European art traditions. At UBC Wilson was exposed to a wealth of Northwest Coast First Nations’ art. He studied artifacts, photographs of artifacts, and learned from practicing artists. He worked as a Project Consultant in the development of the Canadian Museum of Civilization’s Grand Hall exhibition and was an artist-in-residence at the UBC Museum of Anthropology. Wilson has worked on commissions and exhibited his work both locally in Vancouver as well as internationally in Osaka, Japan and New York.
Custodial history
Scope and content
Fonds consists of a copy of Wilson’s “Kitlope Report: Various Haisla Artifacts” and a poster with map designed by Wilson, titled "Kitamaat: People of the Snow" and featuring Haisla place names.
Notes area
Physical condition
Immediate source of acquisition
Report was donated to the Museum of Anthropology by Lyle Wilson in 1991. Poster was donated in 2023.
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The original (report) was donated to the Canadian Museum of History.
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Consult archivist for details.
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Physical location note
Multiple Private Records Box 7 and Oversize box 34
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Copied from MemoryBC on November 24, 2015 by Katie Ferrante.