Balance

Balance is at the heart of who we are as people and a
company

Balance reflects ourmost
cherished values
and our truest
character

What’s behind our brand? Scroll to discover the guiding brand principles of Sealaska.
  • Reciprocity
  • GENEROSITY
  • OPTIMISM
  • CELEBRATION
  • humility
  • respect
OUR GUIDING
BRAND PRINCIPLES
Our brand story is a mirror of the reciprocity—of the cooperation and exchange—that has been part of our cultures for millennia.
We are generous of spirit, putting our shareholders and our communities above all else, supporting them with initiatives and services that elevate and strengthen.
Our strategic vision is a declaration of our optimism. It inspires us to work toward the health of our communities and planet.
We honor and prize our Alaska Native heritage, our culture, our roots. We celebrate all our people, communities, lands and history.
We are humble, grounded and genuine. We listen and we treat others with the spirit of caring, warmth and honor that encourages lasting relationships.
Our brand shows reverence for our values, our truths and our aspirations, and respects those of our employees, shareholders and communities.

We are always at our best when
we're
in service to
others.

Introducing Sealaska’s new logo

Sealaska’s new logo

Sealaska’s new logo is composed of traditional formline created by Tsimshian master artist David R. Boxley (Gyibaawm Laxha) of Metlakatla. The inspiration for the design is a salmon egg. The shape of the logo, like the egg, is a circle, representing a perpetual cycle that sustains and renews. As Sealaska prepares to mark its 50th anniversary in 2022, we are building a company designed to sustain future generations of shareholders and descendants for the next 100 years.

Why a salmon egg?

The salmon egg represents the promise and obligation we hold for future generations. As the salmon matures and heads downstream, it requires an entire system in balance – forest, animals, ocean and people. All of us rely on the salmon in turn.

Balance is the aspiration that focuses our work, challenging us to confront the greatest problems facing our people – a warming climate, changing oceans, inequities in systems and opportunities. It requires us to be courageous and deeply self-aware, humble and optimistic at the same time. The resiliency and adaptability of the salmon reminds us that the knowledge we need to sustain ourselves was passed down to us from our ancestors.

Sealaska, like the salmon, is inextricably connected to a very meaningful place that has been home to our ancestors since the beginning. Our path to maturity may take us far from where we were born, but we always strive to return home, connect our children to their culture, and give back to the place that created us.

DAVID ROBERT BOXLEY

David Robert Boxley (Gyibaawm Laxha) has been an artist his entire life, beginning at the side of his father and renowned carver, David Albert Boxley. David R. Boxley pursued his own path and began selling his work in galleries at age 13. He trained with master illustrator Chris Hopkins in high school, attended two years of art school, worked with his father on more than a dozen totem poles in his 20s and worked for and studied under Haida master artist Robert Davidson. Today, David R. Boxley works in many mediums, including red cedar, yellow cedar, alder, paper, hide, silver, gold and digital. In addition to his work as an artist, Boxley is a language scholar and teacher, working with children and adults to perpetuate the Sm'álgyax (Tsimshian) language.
About the Artist

DAVID ROBERT BOXLEY

I have been an artist my entire life. My parents tell me they wouldn’t have to worry about me for hours as long as I had a stack of paper and crayons, even at 3 years old. I started carving with my father, David Albert Boxley, when I was 6 years old. I never formally apprenticed with my dad, rather, I just spent time with him in his shop. One week I’d decide to make a bowl and he’d show me how.

I’ve been selling my work in galleries since I was 13. I trained with master illustrator Chris Hopkins while I was in high school. After two years of art school, I decided to leave and commit to carving, full time.

In my 20’s, dad and I made over a dozen totem poles together and I started taking on my own major commissions, as well as showing in galleries internationally.

In 2009, I had the great fortune of working for and learning from Robert Davidson. This was the equivalent to a PhD program for a carver and over two years, learned so much.
I have been incredibly fortunate. I work in many mediums: red cedar, yellow cedar, alder, paper, hide, silver, gold and digital.

Formline, two-dimensional Northwest Coast design, is iconic, ancient and timeless. Our peoples have utilized this shared, complex and beautiful design system for eons to display our crests and decorate our treasures. This design system is all about balance: between red and black and between positive and negative space. It is a clear reflection of our culture and its values. I’m thankful that the board of directors saw how important it was to represent with Formline, knowing that it is a true representation of its people.

Though many designs and concepts were attempted, the salmon was an idea and that kept coming back (pun intended). The Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian ARE salmon people. Our cultures are literally built around the life cycle of the salmon. It was necessary to walk a fine line between simplicity, for the flexibility needed for a modern logo, and using proper Formline design. The logo that was decided on does both and is full of meaning.

The Salmon Egg symbolizes our connection to the salmon and the respect we must show the salmon in order for them to keep returning to us, as well as the respect and balance we must show to each other and the natural world. It also represents our own life cycles and how we have a responsibility to look to the future to build a better world for the generations to come.

The Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian have always been connected. Intermarriages, trade relationships, and even common origins tie us together in so many ways. Tsimshian were hired to paint screens for our neighbors often in the old days and I am honored to continue that tradition today.

Letters from President and CEO Anthony Mallott and Board Chair Joe Nelson

“The salmon egg logo will serve as a reminder to future generations that Sealaska is home.”
Joe Nelson
“As we continuously do the work to understand who we are and where we come from, and to apply that knowledge to our modern concerns, we are humbled by the opportunities to share that reflection and understanding with others. Our work on this new brand for Sealaska is just one expression of that introspective process. We hope in sharing our discovery and our story, we can inspire others with the creativity, depth and balance of our traditional arts and Indigenous knowledge.”
Anthony Mallott

We build success by working through our core values.

  • Working Together
  • Insatiable Curiosity
  • Humility, Respect and Transparency
  • Creating Value While Maintaining Focus, Clarity and Drive
Letter from Leadership
Gunnuk'
Anthony Mallot

Letter from the President & CEO

To our community,

One of the most fulfilling aspects of my time as president and CEO of Sealaska has been seeing the hard work and intention that has led to realigning our business with our traditional cultural values, and watching that alignment result in financial performance that grows stronger every year.

Several years ago, we consciously decided that how we make money needs to draw on our core competencies as a people and contribute to a healthy, balanced economy and natural environment. We wanted our children, and their children, to be proud of us, and to know that we did not shy away from the planet’s most pressing problems at this critical time, including the changing climate and acidification of our oceans.

Our care for future generations is a core cultural value called Haa Shuká (Tlingit), Íitl’ Kuníisii (Haida) and Na Hlagigyadm (Tsimshian). In English, it is translated as “past, present and future,” and it means that we are called upon to learn from our past and perpetuate our ancestors’ knowledge on behalf of our grandchildren.

Our businesses today are centered on ocean health. We are creative problem solvers who combine Indigenous knowledge with Western science and engineering to clean up our soil and water; use data to answer challenging questions; prepare healthy, low-impact foods like wild salmon and other seafood; and construct (and deconstruct) infrastructure in an environmentally responsible manner. With this approach, we are seeing consistent growth in the earnings generated by these businesses, and in turn, consistent growth in the level of benefits we are able to offer to shareholders. This means more scholarships, more support for regional entrepreneurs, more of the urgent work of preserving our traditional languages, and the flexibility to provide additional, critical support for our shareholders during the COVID-19 pandemic.

We are a corporation, but not a traditional one. We seek to grow, but not for growth’s sake. The purpose of our business endeavors is to provide the benefits our shareholders value. As we continuously do the work to understand who we are and where we come from, and to apply that knowledge to our modern concerns, we are humbled by the opportunities to share that reflection and understanding with others. Our work on this new brand for Sealaska is just one expression of that introspective process. We hope in sharing our discovery and our story, we can inspire others with the creativity, depth and balance of our traditional arts and Indigenous knowledge.

Gunalchéesh, Háw’aa, T’oyaxsut ‘nüüsm.

Anthony Mallott | Gunnuk’

President & CEO

Kaaxúxgu
Joe Nelson

Letter from the Board Chair

The salmon egg is the inspiration for our new logo mark. The salmon egg is a great representation of balance, strength and resilience in a very dynamic environment.

Like the salmon, our #OneSealaska community is about that undeniable connection to a very special place. A place we know as home.

#OneSealaska is both local and global.

#OneSealaska is understanding that when you take care of the land and water, the land and water will take care of you. We are all one. We have one planet. We need to take care of it.

It is understanding that our local economies are our world. At the same time, it is understanding that we are connected to the rest of the world.

#OneSealaska is the past, the present, and the future.

It is having reverence for our ancestors, to help us make decisions for the benefit of those yet to be born.

#OneSealaska is about working together.

It is understanding that we cannot achieve our goals alone. Strengthening communities, caring for land and water, requires meaningful partnerships. It requires alignment around a shared purpose.

#OneSealaska is knowing what it means to be salmon people.

The Tlingit, the Haida, and the Tsimshian are salmon people, literally and figuratively.

Salmon rely on clean water. We rely on salmon.

#OneSealaska is about finding balance.

Balance requires discipline. It builds muscle. Balance is a mental, physical and emotional activity. It requires work. With practice, with time, it becomes a habit. It becomes who we are. The ability to find this balance is one of the qualities that differentiates elders from old people. We rely on elders to maintain social, emotional, physical balance and strength. Their wisdom is priceless.

The salmon egg logo will serve as a reminder to future generations that Sealaska is home.

Balance provides
the
footing we
need to
advance
our business

…and the lives of
those
we serve