Langley Centennial Museum
Hello, Guest
Add As Favorite
Language
Viewing Object
Print
Saved List Options
My Saved List
Select
/
Clear
Create a New Saved List
Add
Object Description
Share
Object Name
Photograph
Object ID
2019.018.001
Title
"This is Kwantlen" Photography Project Group Photograph.
Date
Feb. 2019.
Description
Black and white photograph of the students and Kwantlen peoples involved in the "This is Kwantlen" photography project by students of Langley Fine Arts School. There are four loose rows of people in the photograph, with two rows standing in the back and two seated in the front. One student is laying horizontally in front of the group, with his head propped up on his hand. Some of the students are wearing cameras. The man on the left of the back row is emptying a water bottle on the head of the woman in front of him. The group is standing in front of a large building with wood siding and two double doors that are open. There are posters with Indigenous art on either side of the doors: the one on the left has writing below the image in English, and the other has writing in hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓. Visible on the English poster are the words "Health . Happiness . Humbleness . Generosity . Generations."
People/Subject
Langley Fine Arts School
Native Peoples of North America
q̓ʷɑ:n̓ƛ̓ən̓, Kwantlen First Nation
'Kwantlen' translates to tireless runner. Kwantlen Traditional Territory extends from Richmond and New Westminster in the west, to Surrey and Langley in the south, east to Mission, and to the northernmost reaches of Stave Lake. The Kwantlen People have lived on this land since time immemorial.
The Kwantlen First Nation are an Indigenous group, mainly located on McMillan Island in Fort Langley. Prior to European contact, their main village was Sqaiametl, where New Westminster is today, but they moved their main settlement to Fort Langley after the Hudson's Bay Company established a fort there. The Kwantlen traded with the Fort. As Canada came together, the Kwantlen peoples' importance in the country diminished, and their affairs were turned over to an Indian Agent. Modernly, the Kwantlen have seen a cultural resurgence after times of displacement and cultural loss, as well as economic growth through their business group, Seyem' Qwantlen. Their current hereditary chief is Marilyn Gabriel. The Kwantlen are culturally a Stó:lō people, though they operate as an independent nation. They speak the Downriver dialect of Halkomelem (hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, or Hun'qumi'num). There has been a renewed focus on teaching and learning hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, one of the ways Kwantlen is reclaiming their culture.
Print
Saved List Options
My Saved List
Select
/
Clear
Create a New Saved List
Add
Opens in a new window.
Argus v4.4.2.32 - Langley Centennial Museum