game sticks

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Nom de l'objet : game sticks
Artiste ou artisan : Point, Dominic
Type de l'objet : game sticks
Catégorie de l'objet : TOYS & GAMES
Matériaux : pigment
stain
wood, yellow cedar
Technique de fabrication : carved
painted
Numéro de catalogue : A17074
Province d'origine : British Columbia
Pays d'origine : Canada
Continent d'origine : North America
Culture : Coast Salish: Musqueam
Secteur géo-culturel : Northwest Coast
Contexte culturel : gambling
games
social activity
Date de début de production : 1972
Date de fin de production : 1972
Description : Set of fourteen wooden, game sticks (parts a-n) with tapered, pointed, tips; seven sticks are cylindrical with triangular shaped ends; seven are rectangular with flat, squared bottoms. The game sticks are decorated with horizontal or diagonal engraved lin
Fonctions : These pieces are part of a game called Slahal or Lehal in the Chinook jargon (a trade language). In English the game is known as the bone game. It has spread all over western North America and is still very popular today at events which bring together large numbers of people, such as powwows and canoe races. Holm notes that: "Lehal is played with two pairs of bone cylinders, one of each pair plain, the other decorated with an encircling band of black or a design of lines and nucleated circles. A set of counting sticks, usually ten in number, with a specially marked eleventh now called a "kick stick," completes the equipment. The two teams, of from three to a dozen players each, kneel facing each other in parallel lines, each member holding a short baton with which to keep time on a plank that lies on the ground in front of his team. Two players on one team each handle a pair of bones, and one player on the opposing team tries to guess the positions of the two plain bones. Exuberant gambling songs are sung by the team holding the cylinders, while their opponents try to confuse them with feints. Each correct guess wins a pair of bones, each miss loses a counter. When the guesser has won both pairs, his team takes over and the other side guesses. When all the counters are on one side the game is over (1987:40)." The sticks taper to a point as they are stood upright in the ground at the beginning of a game.
Hauteur : 29.2
Largeur : 0.9
Profondeur : 0.9
Unité de mesure linéaire : cm
Département : Museum of Anthropology
Établissement : UBC Museum of Anthropology  Facebook-UBC Museum of Anthropology  Twitter-UBC Museum of Anthropology  YouTube-UBC Museum of Anthropology
Ville de l'établissement : Vancouver
Province de l'établissement : British Columbia
Enregistrement de l'institution : Fiche complète provenant du site du musée

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