View text source at Wikipedia
Established | c. 2000 |
---|---|
Location | 807 5th Avenue, Taholah, Washington |
Coordinates | 47°20′30″N 124°17′18″W / 47.3416°N 124.2882°W |
Type | Cultural |
Collections | Baskets, carvings, tribal library, and photographic archive[1] |
Curator | Lelani Chubby[2] |
Owner | Quinault Indian Nation |
The Quinault Cultural Center and Museum is a museum of culture in Taholah, Washington, owned and funded by the Quinault Indian Nation.[3] It contains artifacts, arts, and crafts of the Quinault, housed in a converted retail building.[4]: 735 [5]: 54 Some of the art forms have been influenced by Polynesian cultural motifs, brought home by World War II veterans.[6]
The museum received a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services in 2012 to conduct research, publish a guidebook, and create a mobile museum exhibit on the tribe's ethnobotanical heritage.[7]
In 2013, the Cultural Center hosted workshops on paddle- and drum-making for thousands of visitors to the Tribal Canoe Journeys.[8]