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Start Over You searched for: Object name Mask Remove constraint Object name: Mask Culture or time period Northern Northwest Coast cultures Remove constraint Culture or time period: Northern Northwest Coast cultures Loans S2009-2010 #11: SFO Museum (dates unknown) Remove constraint Loans: S2009-2010 #11: SFO Museum (dates unknown)

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Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-15548, described as Of male human face; seal fur pegged on to simulate eyebrows, moustache and hairline; red-painted lips, protruding tongue; crack through right eye; no eyeslits or perforations for thongs.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-4804, described as Carved to represent human face of a woman with plug in lower lip. Yellow cedar; painted red, blue, and black. Shows ceremonial facial painting.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-15550, described as Of male face; seal fur eyebrows, mustache and beard; movable eyelids and mouth; red, black, white, orange-brown paint.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-15547, described as Of human face; seal fur pegged on to simulate eyebrows, etc; movable lips; no eyeholes.  Black and red facial markings. Made of alder.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-30942, described as Dance mask resembling puffin (either Horned Puffin [Fratercula corniculata] or Tufted Puffin [Lunda cirrhata]); painted green, black and red.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-10870, described as Bear head mask, decorated with strips of copper; dark brown glass eyes; wood painted black (?), red and white. Had fur cap attached, now long since destroyed by moths.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-19088, described as Wooden, red, green, black, and white. Abalone eyes.
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-15549, described as Mask of female face; movable eyes; red, black and brown pigment on pink ground; may represent non-Indian woman.  J.C.H. King says "probably representing a middle-aged Haida woman, as indicated by the fullness of the cheeks - or perhaps a foreigner".
Hearst Museum object titled Mask, accession number 2-5856, described as Hooked nose, alder wood painted blue, black, and red. Represents a hawk (fide Vera Mae Fredrickson).