-
Orcas at Play (2015)Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framing
- 13.88"h
- 13.88"w
$450 -
Ancestral MemoriesLimited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framing
- 25.63"h
- 29.25"w
$1,325 -
Iona Beach (Remarque)Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framing
- 36.63"h
- 17"w
$2,015 -
WildfireLimited Edition Serigraph
- 34.18"h
- 27.75"w
Contact us to special order -
Salish SpringLimited Edition Serigraph
- 22.63"h
- 21"w
Contact us to special order -
DiscoveriesLimited Edition Serigraph
- 37.25"h
- 28.50"w
Contact us to special order -
New Dawn – State ILimited Edition Serigraph
- 25"h
- 25"w
Contact us to special order -
Robins – State I (Black)Limited Edition Serigraph
- 28.5"h
- 26.5"w
Contact Us to Special Order -
Gateway to the PastLimited Edition Serigraph
- 25"h
- 18.25"w
Contact us to special order -
Anvil Island State #2 – YellowLimited Edition Serigraph
- 43.87"h
- 14.25"w
$900 -
Pacific Northwest CoastLimited Edition Serigraph
- 22"h
- 17.5"w
Contact to Special Order -
Woven ForestLimited Edition Serigraph
- 25.88"h
- 41.38"w
Contact to Special Order -
Southern Coast Salish JourneyLimited Edition Serigraph
- 23.5"h
- 11"w
$550 -
Northern Coast Salish JourneyLimited Edition Serigraph
- 23.5"h
- 11"w
$550 -
Pacific Spirit ’94Limited Edition Serigraph
- 22.25"h
- 22.38"w
Contact to Special Order -
Beyond the Edge – 2015Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framing
- 38.88"h
- 38.63"w
$3,015 -
From the SeaLimited Edition Serigraph, C/P
- 23.50"h
- 22"w
Contact to Special Order -
Indian SummerLimited Edition Serigraph
- 26.63"h
- 26.13"w
Contact to Special Order -
TadpolesLimited Edition Serigraph
- 15.5"h
- 18.5"w
Contact to Special Order -
TadpolesLimited Edition Serigraph
- 15.5"h
- 18.5"w
Contact to Special Order -
TadpolesLimited Edition Serigraph
- 15.5"h
- 18.5"w
Contact to Special Order -
TadpolesLimited Edition Serigraph
- 15.5"h
- 18.5"w
Contact to Special Order -
InspirationLimited Edition Intaglio and Photo Intaglio
- 29"h
- 44"w
$3,700 -
ImpressionsLimited Edition Serigraph
- 21.88"h
- 21.88"w
Contact to Special Order -
HalibutSerigraph
- 30"h
- 30"w
Contact to Special Order -
DiscoveryLimited Edition Serigraph
- 33"h
- 20"w
Contact to Special Order -
Salmon Cedar RopeSerigraph
- 40"h
- 24"w
Contact to Special Order -
SockeyeSerigraph
- 23"h
- 22"w
Contact to Special Order -
Black WatersLimited Edition Serigraph
- 22"h
- 22"w
Contact to Special Order -
Symbol of PowerSerigraph
- 26.75"h
- 26"w
Contact to Special Order -
In Both WorldsSerigraphContact to Special Order
-
ChangesSerigraph
- 20"h
- 33"w
Contact to Special Order -
Salish VisionLimited Edition Serigraph
- 26.5"h
- 26"w
Contact us to Special Order -
Northwind’s Fishing Weir SeriesSerigraph
- 24"h
- 20"w
$4,200 Canadian -
Seattle House Post IV/ISand-Etched Glass, Yellow & Red Cedar, Slumped Mirror
- 42"h
- 21.75"w
- 3"d
$8,750
-
Belonging (2001)Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framing
- 22.88"h
- 22.88"d
SOLD -
New HorizonsRed Cedar, Acrylic, Sand Etched Glass
- 42.75"h
- 17.25"w
- 4"d
SOLD -
Pacific Spirit 2021 – AP EditionLimited Edition Serigraph, Artist Proof EditionSOLD
-
New Dawn – State IILimited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framed
- 30.88"h
- 30.63"w
SOLD -
Vanishing PointLimited Edition Serigraph
- 30"h
- 30"w
SOLD -
Salish Dancer Glass TotemLimited Edition Carved and Slumped Glass, Gold Leaf
- 41"h
- 23.5"w
- 10"d
SOLD -
Changes (2004)Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framed
- 38.75"h
- 26.25"w
SOLD -
Changes – 2004 (Sold-Out Edition)Limited Edition Serigraph with Conservation Framing
- 39"h
- 26.5"w
SOLD -
Enduring Spirits: Pacific Salmon ForestLimited Edition Serigraph
- 33.63"h
- 17.88"w
SOLD -
Orcas at PlayLimited Edition Serigraph
- 15"h
- 15"w
SOLD -
Celestial CirclesLimited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framed
- 32.38"h
- 31.63"w
SOLD -
Anvil Island State #1 – SageLimited Edition Serigraph
- 43.87"h
- 14.25"w
SOLD -
Cast Paper Salmon PanelCast Paper, Mahogany, Acrylic
- 36.5"h
- 36.5"w
- 2"d
SOLD -
The River – Woven By Time (2002)Limited Edition Serigraph, Conservation Framed
- 38"h
- 15.5"w
- 1"d
SOLD -
Continuum – A New GenerationLimited Edition Serigraph
- 10.25"h
- 18.75"w
SOLD -
The River – Rewoven By Time (2003)Limited Edition Serigraph
- 38"h
- 15.5"w
- 1"d
SOLD -
Salmon PaddleYellow Cedar, Acrylic
- 64"h
- 7.5"w
- 1.25"d
SOLD -
Frog Paddle – Blue /RedYellow Cedar, Acrylic
- 64"h
- 7.5"w
- 1.25"d
SOLD -
Cry of the Raven AP (1991)Limited Edition Serigraph, AP
- 36"h
- 19"w
SOLD -
Musqueam ForeshoreLimited Edition Serigraph
- 32"h
- 12.63"w
SOLD -
New HorizonsSand Etched Glass, Red Cedar, Acrylic
- 42.63"h
- 17.50"w
- 3"d
SOLD -
Eagle Paddle with Split HandleRed Cedar, Acrylic
- 58"h
- 6"w
- 1.25"d
SOLD -
Water: Essence of LifeWestern Red Cedar
- 96"h
- 96"w
- 3"d
SOLD -
Canoe PassLimited Edition Serigraph
- 32"h
- 12.5"w
SOLD -
Mosquito PaddleRed Cedar, Acrylic
- 60"h
- 5.88"w
- 1"d
SOLD -
RemembranceLimited Edition Serigraph
- 30"h
- 30"w
SOLD -
North ArmLimited Edition Serigraph
- 32"h
- 13"w
SOLD -
Ancestral VisionSerigraph
- 15"h
- 15"w
SOLD -
Hummingbird Spindle WhorlSand Blasted Glass, Cedar
- 24"h
- 24"w
- 6"d
SOLD -
Beaver Woman Spindle WhorlSand Carved Glass
- 19"h
- 25"w
SOLD -
The Essence of Life, ContinuedSerigraph
- 22"h
- 23"w
SOLD -
Sacred VisionRawhide, Cedar, Acrylic
- 23.5"h
- 23.5"w
- 4"d
SOLD -
Sharing a Vision Ceremonial RobeSheep Wool, Abalone, Mother of Pearl
- 66.25"h
- 53"w
- .5"d
SOLD -
ReturnRed Cedar, Carved Glass, Stainless Steel
- 29"h
- 32"w
- 36"d
SOLD -
Eagle, Frog and Butterfly CopperSerigraph
- 25.5"h
- 19.5"w
SOLD -
TimeSerigraph
- 30"h
- 30"w
SOLD -
Salmon PaddleYellow Cedar, Acrylic
- 74.5"h
- 9"w
- 1.5"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post II/IISand Carved Glass, Cedar Stand
- 30.75"h
- 10"w
- 18"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post II/IKiln-Slumped and Carved Glass, Cedar, Pigments
- 29.38"h
- 23"w
- 3.5"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post III/IISand Carved Glass, Cedar Stand
- 30.75"h
- 10"w
- 18"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post I/IISand Carved Glass, Cedar Stand
- 30.75"h
- 10"w
- 18"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post III/IKiln-Slumped and Carved Glass, Copper, Bronze, Oak
- 38.5"h
- 21.5"w
- 3"d
SOLD -
Northwind’s Fishing WeirRed Cedar, Acrylic, Copper, Antler
- 46"h
- 129"w
- 2.5"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post I/ICarved, Kiln-Slumped, Fire-Polished, Glass, Purple Heart
- 31"h
- 17.5"w
- 2.25"d
SOLD -
Seattle House Post IV/IISand Carved Glass
- 30.75"h
- 18"w
- 10"d
SOLD
Susan A. Point is a Coast Salish artist from Musqueam, a First Nation in Vancouver, British Columbia. Born in 1952, from childhood Susan has been taught the traditional values of her culture and legends of her people by her many aunts and uncles, but above all by her late mother, Edna Grant-Point, and her late uncle, Dominic Point.
Susan began her artistic career in January 1981 designing and creating gold/silver jewelry. At this time, Coast Salish art was an almost lost art form (due to European contact) therefore much of the native artwork produced and sold through various galleries and museums consisted of northern First Nations art. Eager to learn more about her own peoples art style, Susan chose to concentrate on the traditional designs and elements created by her ancestral artisans.
Through research and consultation with various museums and libraries (both in Canada and the U.S.), Susan began her study on the design and art style of traditional Coast Salish artifacts. Consulting with her uncle, Professor Michael Kew, at the University of British Columbia, who focused in “Coast Salish Art and Culture”, Susan then began her career as a Coast Salish artist (representing “all” of her Coast Salish peoples) creating designs reflecting traditional images of
the past in jewelry, limited edition serigraphs, and paintings. She takes much of her imagery from the spindle whorl an elaborately carved bone or wood disk that was used in the spinning of wool by Coast Salish women.
Coast Salish women have used the spindle whorl for centuries to spin their mountain goat wool into yarn. The oldest whorls discovered by archaeologists were carved from stone. Shell, bone, and whale vertebra were also used, but wood became the most common material from which they were made. Spindle whorls consist of a circular disk and a center pole. They came in various shapes and sizes; the size of the disk and the center pole determined the thickness of the diameter for the strands of yarn.
Ironically, although Susan researched and tried to understand the art style of her ancestors, her very first two-dimensional image using the silkscreen process was a “contemporary” print entitled “Salmon”.
Over the past 3 decades, Susan has been instrumental in re-establishing Coast Salish art both in Canada and the United States, drawing inspiration from the images of her ancestors and commencing the use of non-traditional materials and techniques in paper, glass, bronze, wood, concrete, polymer, stainless steel, and cast iron; Inspiring a whole new generation of Northwest Coast artists. Susan’s biggest reward has been the opportunity to meet elders and teachers from other communities around the world, and to see the current renaissance in Coast Salish art and culture.
As a result of Susan’s willingness, drive, and love of experimentation, she has been awarded numerous public art commissions, including building facades and large sculptures in Canada and the U.S. To name a few, these large scale works welcome visitors at the Vancouver International Airport, Stanley Park in Vancouver, B.C., the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., the U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology as well as numerous public buildings and corporate developments paying tribute to the native peoples that once inhabited these lands as well as all peoples from the four corners of the earth (past, present and future) who also share and inhabit these same lands. Susan also has collections worldwide in various museums as well as within homes of private clientele.
For Susan’s hard work over the years, in educating all people on Coast Salish art, which is unique to the lower mainland of Vancouver, the southern tip of Vancouver Island and the North Coast of Washington State, she has been awarded the Order of Canada, in addition to a National Aboriginal Achievement Award, a YWCA Woman of Distinction Award, a B.C. Creative Achievement Award, appointed to the Royal Academy of Arts, was elected to the International Women’s Forum, and has received four Honorary Doctorates from the University of Victoria, Simon Fraser University, University of B.C. and Emily Carr University of Art and Design.