Sealaska Heritage Institute

SHI's Alaskan Native Artistic Mastery,
Inspired by its People

SHI
the arts.

From Then to Now: Northwest Coast Art and the Future Ahead

As part of our mission to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures, we are helping to perpetuate and promote Northwest Coast Native art.

Northwest Coast (NWC) art evolved over several thousand years in the rich and complex Indigenous societies of the Pacific Northwest of North America. Art adorned everything from monumental structures and ceremonial regalia to basic utilitarian objects. The simplicity of the design components—elements of a system known as formline—belie the complexity and sophistication that was achieved in this two-dimensional NWC art tradition. From the earliest contact with Westerners, wood carvings, weavings, and other cultural pieces depicting NWC art were aggressively collected by museums and visitors and acclaimed as one of the most distinctive and unique art traditions in the world. Today, this ancient tradition continues to evolve through the work of contemporary NWC artists.

NWC art occupies an important position in America’s artistic traditions and cultural history. Most importantly, it plays a significant role in maintaining the cultural diversity of the nation and the cultural survival of the region’s Indigenous populations. Like jazz music, which was designated a national treasure by Congress in 1987, NWC art should be designated a national treasure of the United States.

arts department

Northwest Coast Art and the Future Ahead

As part of our mission to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures, we are helping to perpetuate and promote Northwest Coast Native art.

SHI's Artist Resources

Click on the below links for more details:

SHI
Northwest Coast Training.

We have a vision to make Juneau the NWC art capital, a quest that began with the construction of the Walter Soboleff Building, which is in itself a work of art and is adorned with monumental art pieces by three master indigenous artists of international acclaim. The creation of the NWC arts capital ensures the survival of NWC arts, providing untold sustainable social and economic benefits to the region and state.

SHI partners with Southeast Alaska school districts, tribes, nonprofit organizations, the University of Alaska Southeast and the Institute of American Indian Arts to carry out its art programming.

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