The Aboriginal Canada Portal closed February 12, 2013. The Digital Aboriginals of True North Turtle Island have intervened. Please visit this web page for more information.
Through various programs, the Coqualeetza Cultural Education Centre strives to promote, preserve and interpret Sto:lo lifestyle, language, traditions, and heritage.
These art works were created by artists who lived in or travelled through British Columbia and sketched or painted views of the landscape, peoples and activities.
Provides membership and citizenship services for everybody who is Métis or who may think they may have enough genealogical history that they may be Métis.
The centre offers a variety of cultural activities, recreation, community events, social opportunities, resources, community education and one to one support.
Website of the 2010 Aboriginal Pavilion, or Chiefs' House, that will be launched by Four Host First Nations at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.
Creates a following for the work of individual aboriginal artists from three areas the Northwest Coast of Canada, Papua New Guinea, and Australia- in the fine art market in Canada and abroad.
The Black Tusk Gallery features a variety of works by the First Nations artists whose work reflects the ancient histories and traditions of the coastal people.
Coastal Peoples is a leading gallery showcasing museum quality Northwest Coast First Nations and Inuit artwork located in the heart of the Yaletown district in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Coast Salish Journey is a group of First Nation Coast Salish artists and artisans who have come together largely because of their commitment to the creation of unique Quality Commissions for their customers.
Here you will find a selection from their four Native Art galleries in beautiful British Columbia, as well as a number of items from their sister store, Frances Hill's, located in Gastown, Vancouver.
Ice Bear (in Ojibway, Mikwamii-makwa, and Chris Johnson to his friends) is a status member of the Chippewas of Nawash at Cape Croker at Georgian Bay in Ontario.
Carries a tradition of presenting important exhibitions of Canadian aboriginal art, featuring new works by senior artists and exploring the work of the talented next generation of artists.
The gallery features an impressive array of local art, including First Nations original paintings, prints, carvings and jewelry; oil and watercolor originals by some of the area's best-known landscape and portrait painters; etc.
The Path Gallery located in Whistler features Northwest coast Native art by First Nations people. Its website includes a large sample of the various types of artworks found at the gallery.
Located in Bella Coola, British Columbia, Canada, Petroglyph Gallery houses a collection of Northwest Coast Native Art specializing in the art done by the people of the Nuxalk First Nation.
The studio provides prints, masks, totem poles, glass, sandblasted granite, and red cedar aromatic boxes to several galleries in North America. They also create original corporate logos and the related products required.
This art gallery specializes in Haida Art and Kwakiutl Art, offering original Pacific Northwest Coast Native Art including masks, carvings and sculptures. The site contains numerous photos from the gallery.