T’annu’s Falling Eyes Pole
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Haida

T’annu’s Man with the
Falling Eyes

This house frontal pole from T’annu, tells the story of a mythical Haida Sea Chief whose eyes dropped out each night.

Many figures on poles refer to stories about supernatural beings or past encounters with them. Stories such as those on the “falling eyes” pole from T'anuu Llnagaay are part of living Haida culture, telling about profound relationships between human and natural worlds.

We often know where totems come from and which tribe they are attached to, but what meaning do the animals and people represented in cedar carry with them?

But the stories that poles illustrate are not always easy to interpret just by looking at the images. Jaalen Edenshaw, a contemporary Haida carver, explains:

How it is represented depends on what was going on in the story. There might be little ‘tells’ within the characters to trigger memories of that story, but not necessarily. You have to have been at a feast to know which story an Eagle [on a pole] tells, and an Eagle on the next pole over tells a different story. You would have actually had to have been at the pole raising and heard those stories, and then you can associate that pole and that figure with that history.

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A map showing the location of the Haida territory: an island on the western coast of B.C. called Haida Gwaii

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Jaaleen Edenshaw

INTERVIEW

Jaaleen Edenshaw

Jaaleen Edenshaw of the Joth clan in Masset has been totem carving for over 20 years. Now working on his own creations after much practice and research, Jaaleen ties the totems to the stories to the people behind them.

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JOURNEYS

Origin

This pole stood in front of House That Makes a Noise, a dwelling at T'anuu Llnagaay (eelgrass town, also known as Tanu) on Tanu Island in Laskeek Bay. The house and pole were owned by Gwiskunas, from the lineage of Those Born at Qadasgo Creek, part of the Raven division of the Haida. At one time, there were between 25 to 40 longhouses in T’aanuu Llnagaay, along with 31 mortuary poles and 15 mortuary houses.

This pole is often referred to as the “falling eyes” pole. Artist Emily Carr thought the main figure referred to a weeping woman because its falling eyes looked to her like tears. Rather, it represents the Sea Chief, whose eyes would drop from their sockets and hang down to his waist at night. At mealtimes his friends would place his eyeballs back in their sockets, hold them there, and support his eyelids so that he could see to eat.

The Sea Chief's principal food is hair seal, which he must swallow whole because he has no teeth. After several hours he spits out the undigested bones with great force. He is shown with hanging eyeballs, which take the form of small human figures. On his torso is an image of a frog. Above his forehead, a hair seal is depicted. The hawk-like face flanked by talons at the very top of this section is part of a bird image that belongs to the top section of the pole.

The top figure on the pole is a group of three watchmen wearing ringed hats, a feature of most Haida poles, though some have fewer rings. The figures look out to sea and, according to Haida stories, call out warnings if enemies approach. Tall ringed hats indicate their high status.

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View from the beach of village houses and poles.

View of the centre of T'anuu Llnagaay in 1897 with the ‘falling eyes’ pole on the left. Charles F. Newcombe photograph. PN 5652.

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Village houses and house frontal poles.

The pole is second from left in this photograph taken in 1901. Charles F. Newcombe photograph. PN 104.

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View from the beach of poles and houses.

This photograph was taken during Emily Carr’s visit to T'anuu Llnagaay, probably in 1912. The pole she called the ‘crying totem’ is on the left. PN 5542.

Under the watchmen is an eagle, the crest of the house owner’s wife, with the figure of a hawk or owl between its wings. Below that is a hair seal, then the main figure—the Sea Chief—with a frog on his chest. Next is a killer whale with a human figure grasping its tail and its dorsal fin between the knees of another figure; these refer to the story of Nanasimgut, whose wife was abducted by a killer whale. At the bottom is a sea bear swallowing a sea mammal, whose flippers protrude from the side of the whale’s mouth. Small animals look out from the ears of the sea bear.

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Watercolour painting of a pole standing in foliage.

Emily Carr’s watercolour painting of the pole, 1912. PDP02313. Carr’s 1928 oil painting of the pole, The Crying Totem, is in the collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

 
 

JOURNEYS

Removal

In 1954, by arrangement of the Totem Pole Preservation Committee, the Falling Eyes pole was purchased, taken down, cut into sections for transport, and moved from T'anuu Llnagaay. In 1966 Kwagu’ł carvers Henry Hunt and his son Tony Hunt carved a replica of the complete pole, working from the parts of the pole that came to the Royal BC Museum and also from photographs of the entire pole as it stood at T'anuu Llnagaay.

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View of a pole standing among trees

The pole was still standing when the Totem Pole Preservation Committee went to T'anuu Llnagaay in 1954 to salvage remaining poles. Wilson Duff photograph. PN 5749.

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Man standing beside the bottom portion of a pole, touching it.

Wilson Duff, curator of anthropology at the BC Provincial Museum (now the Royal BC Museum) and a member of the Totem Pole Preservation Committee examines the pole during the 1954 salvage operation at T'anuu Llnagaay. PN 5754.

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Detail of the middle portion of the pole leaning among trees.

Detail of the pole in situ at T'anuu Llnagaay. Wilson Duff photograph, 1954. PN 5755.

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Le poteau, supporté par une corde, penche et s’appuie lourdement sur un arbre.

The pole being lowered on roles in preparation for its removal. Wilson Duff photograph, 1954. PN 5746.

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Pole lying on a few beams on the ground.

The pole on the ground being prepared for shipment. Wilson Duff photograph, 1954. PN 5753

 
 

JOURNEYS

Today

Little is left standing at T’aanuu Llnagaay today, but the spirit of the place is still strong. The house depressions and fallen moss-covered house posts give a strong sense of the layout of the village. T’aanu Llnagaay is part of the Haida Heritage Site although not part of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve or the National Marine Conservation Area Reserve.

Two representations of the Falling Eyes pole are on display at the Royal BC Museum—a section of the original pole with the figure of the Sea Chief and the replica of the entire pole.
 

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Carved Haida pole in the museum collection.

This pole section is on display behind glass at the east entrance to the Royal BC Museum.

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Eye portion fragment of a carved figure from a pole.

A fragment of the pole from T'anuu Llnagaay is in storage at the Royal BC Museum.

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Pencil drawing and dimensions of portion of a pole by John Smyly.

Museum technician John Smyly labelled his drawings of the pole the ‘Weeping Pole.’

The pole and details of the carving drawn by John Smyly, who restored the pole section now at the museum.

CONNECTIONS

Related Carvings

Hlragilda Llnagaay, Haida
Hlragilda Llnagaay, Haida
T’anuu Llnagaay, Haida
T’anuu Llnagaay, Haida
SGang Gwaay Llnagaay, Haida
SGang Gwaay Llnagaay, Haida
Community

First Totems Story

First Totems Story

Each Haida pole has its own story but there is a story of the origin of all Haida poles

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Drawing of a group of people raising a totem pole
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Drawing of many people of a village

There were many of them at Git̓anḵ’a village. 

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Drawing of a man on the beach holding his hand up with the sun in the background

It was very calm. And it was also very sunny.

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Drawing of four people in a canoe in front of houses with totem poles

They looked at it for a long time. And they memorized it.

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Drawing of many people of a village

And when they got to Tl’uu sḵans (the crabapple patch at the end of the tree line at Née Kún), they talked about it.

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Drawing of a group of people raising a totem pole

They began to raise the carving.

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Drawing of a man and woman in canoe beside a beach

And they went to Daal ḵaahlii.

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Drawing of a man and pointing woman in a canoe

And while she was resting from paddling, this woman was looking in the water. And as she was looking in the water, she saw something that was carved, a long, log-like shape.

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Drawing of a man and woman in canoe beside a beach

When they finished memorizing it, they left.

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Drawing of three people in front of beach and water

“We will make copies of the carvings on the chief’s house,” some of them said. 

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Drawing of a man dressed as a thunderbird, a drummer and several men in a canoe

From there, when it was getting to be fall, they went food gathering to Nee Kun in two big canoes. They went on a berry picking trip.

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Drawing of a carved image

It was a carved image.

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Drawing of a man dressed as a thunderbird, a drummer and several men in a canoe

And when they were finished getting berries, they returned home by canoe.

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Drawing of two men carving a pole on the ground

People started carving them soon after.