High Slack: An Installation by Judith Williams

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  • June 21 - December, 1994
  • ‘High Slack’ is the moment when the tide has risen to its highest point before the ebb. Vancouver artist and UBC Fine Arts Professor Judith Williams sees this pause in the tides as a metaphor for a moment of calm in the social current. The installation of paintings, sculptures, photographs and bookworks at MOA is a series of proposals for future directions in our relations to the “other,” whoever, and whatever that might be. This exhibition is not a statement; rather, it provides an atmosphere for contemplation and change.

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High Slack: An Installation by Judith Williams

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UBC Museum of Anthropology Annual Report April 1, 1994 - March 31, 1995

The report outlines the museum's administrative activities and finances for the previous fiscal year as well as listing staff, attendance figures, acquisitions, exhibitions, educational activities, public programming, events, loans, research projects, publications of the museum and its staff, and media coverage of the museum. It includes descriptions of plans to make the museum collections publicly available on the internet, MOA's continued consultation with the Vancouver International Airport, and the final year of the prison outreach program, among other initiatives.

High Slack: An Installation by Judith Williams

This exhibit by Vancouver Artist and UBC Fine Arts Professor Judith Williams included installations of paintings, sculptures, photographs and bookworks at MOA as a series of proposals for future directions in our relations with “other.”