- 3-3-04-3-04-F-28
- Item
- 1979
Item consists of a CD-ROM copy of a recording of Learning Gitksan: books 1 & 2, read by various Gitxsan speakers from Kitwancool and Kitsegukla.
575 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Item consists of a CD-ROM copy of a recording of Learning Gitksan: books 1 & 2, read by various Gitxsan speakers from Kitwancool and Kitsegukla.
File contains historical photographs of Gitxsan villages, with a specific focus on totem poles and various buildings in the villages. There are also some images of the Gitxsan people in regalia. The textual records contain information to some of the photographs, listing the photograph's title and the museum and/or archive it originated from.
File consists of photographic prints depicting Gitanyow cultural objects from other institutions. Many of the prints are annotated with handwritten, stamped, or typed information about the contents of the images or their original repositories. The contents of this file were used to create object labels for MOA Object ID A50019 in MOA's Great Hall.
Girls walking in pairs on field
Part of John Mennie fonds
Girls in pairs, walking off the field towards proper right. Crowd and officials seen behind, in distance
Part of John Mennie fonds
Girls racing. Ten are visible, bunched at mid-ground. Crowd gathered along the fence near proper right.
Girls gathered on the steps of Fort Simpson Girls' Home.
Girl from Klemtu (from first book Somewhere Between)
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of a girl seated in a chair inside.
Anthony Carter
Girl at potlatch in North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a girl at a potlatch in North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Girl at potlatch in North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a girl at a potlatch in North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Girl at potlatch in North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a girl at a potlatch in North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Girl at potlatch in North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a girl at a potlatch in North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Girl at potlatch in North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a girl at a potlatch in North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Gillian Darling wearing a cardboard mask
Part of MOA General Media collection
Gillian Darling wearing a cardboard mask that appears to have been made from packing materials. This photograph was taken as the museum was being packed up for moving to the new Museum of Anthropology building.
Gillian Darling wearing a cardboard mask
Part of MOA General Media collection
Gillian Darling wearing a cardboard mask that appears to have been made from packing materials. This photograph was taken as the museum was being packed up for moving to the new Museum of Anthropology building.
This fonds consists of textual records, photographs, negatives, slides, audio recordings, compact discs and video on DVD that relate to Kovanic’s academic and film career. The fonds relates especially to her work in Pakistan, India and Afghanistan, but also captures her work with First Nations on the Northwest coast of British Columbia.
Gillian Darling Kovanic
Part of E. Polly Hammer fonds
Part of E. Polly Hammer fonds
Fonds consists of eight slides of totem poles being raised in the Haida Village at the University of British Columbia (UBC). The slides are dated May, 1962. The photographs were taken by George Szanto, the son-in-law of Geoffrey Andrew who was the Dean and Deputy President of UBC from 1947 to 1962.
The totem poles represented in the images were carved by Haida artist Bill Reid and 'Namgis artist Doug Cranmer. They were originally situated at UBC's Totem Park. They are now located on the grounds behind the Museum of Anthropology, and modelled on a 19th century Haida village.
George Szanto
George Hunt Sr. pole (Kwakwaka’wakw)
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of totem pole carved by George Hunt Sr. The pole is now part of the museum's collection.
This pole was originally carved for the Edward S. Curtis film "In the Land of the War Canoes" which was originally titled "In the Land of the Head Hunters". The pole was repaired and re-painted by carvers Ellen Neel in 1949 and Mungo Martin in 1950-51. It stood at Totem Park, UBC Campus until it was re-located to the Museum's Great Hall in 1976.
Anthony Carter
The fonds consists of records relating to Hennessy’s 2003 MA thesis titled The Spirit of Collaboration: Exploring Critical Pedagogical Principles in Transforming the Museum Through Space and Time. Hennessy was interested in the relationships that developed between community members and museum staff during the process of putting together the Museum of Anthropology’s exhibit The Spirit of Islam, which ran from October 2001 to May 2002. Her purpose was to document the kinds of collaborative processes that occurred as the exhibit planning progressed in order to identify a model from which other museums working with communities might benefit.
Genni Hennessy