The Story of Big Beaver | |
Artist: | Norman Tait |
Medium: | Totem Pole carved out of a cedar tree |
Height Imperial: | 55 |
Metric Unit: | m |
Imperial Unit: | ft |
Museum: | Field Museum of Natural History |
City: | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Mapframe: | yes |
Mapframe-Zoom: | 13 |
Big Beaver Totem Pole[1] (also known as Story of Big Beaver,[2] or simply Big Beaver)[3] [4] is a 55feet tall outdoor totem pole sculpture by Norman Tait, of the Nisga'a people of British Columbia, located in front of the north entrance to the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, Illinois.
The totem pole was carved out of a cedar tree donated by the Council of Forest Industries of British Columbia, according to the plaque, and was commissioned by the Women's Board of the Field Museum of Natural History to commemorate the 1982 opening of a permanent exhibit about the Maritime Peoples of the Arctic and Northwest Coast. It was erected on April 24, 1982 (around the time the exhibit opened) in an event involving a traditional Nisga'a tribal ceremony with costumes and dancing sponsored by the Field Museum.[5]