No Windows
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- November 27, 2010 - January 23, 2011 (Satellite Gallery)
- No Windows, on view at Satellite Gallery from November 27, 2010 to January 23, 2011, is the result of a unique collaboration between the departments of Anthropology, Art History and Curatorial Studies at the University of British Columbia, as graduate students in each of these programs have joined forces to curate this new and exciting exhibition. No Windows presents artworks by local and national artists Rhonda Weppler + Trevor Mahovsky, Adad Hannah, Jamie Drouin, and Zoe Tissandier. In their work, the artists explore the structures that underlie gallery and museum practices, and challenge visitors' ideas about them as agents in the creation, mediation, and reception of art.
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Faces and Voices of the Inuit Art Market
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- June 19–September 25, 2011 (The Audain Gallery)
- Student exhibition: A sculpture is more than carved stone and a print is more than coloured paper. Many people have played a role in the life of a work of art: from the artist, to the dealers, collectors, purchasers, auctioneers, and curators. Through their connections and points of contact, these people create the Inuit Art Market. How does Inuit art move through the art market? How is authenticity determined? Who decides what is valued? This exhibit, curated by UBC students, invites you to explore these questions and discover the many faces and voices of the Inuit art market. (This exhibit is shown in conjunction with Inuit Prints: Japanese Inspiration - James Houston, Un’ichi Hiratsuka and the Inuit Print Tradition, also shown in The Audain Gallery.)
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Nuxalk Radio: One Nation, Many Voices
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- March 1 – April 3, 2018 (UBC Irving K. Barber Learning Center)
- Student exhibition: Indigenous community radio is a powerful tool. In this exhibition, UBC museum anthropology students worked with Nuxalk Radio in their mission: “Lhulhamktulhs ala ts'ktaliwalh alh ti s kulhulmcilh t'ayc n wa sulutilh ats (Broadcasting the Laws of the Lands and Waters.)” Nuxalk Radio expresses the many voices of the Nuxalk Nation. Through the airwaves and online, radio connects the Nuxalk people to each other and to other Indigenous communities. It inspires Nuxalk language learning and promotes the return to ancestral governance. It fosters community well-being, now and in the future for those not yet born, and asserts Indigenous rights.
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Conversations: The Dr. Miguel and Julia Tecson Philippine Collection
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- April 6 - February, 2001
- Student exhibition: As part of their course work at UBC, students in Anthropology 432, The Anthropology of Public Representation, presents an exhibition of Philippine pottery, textiles, metalwork, and other media collected and donated to the Museum by Dr. Miguel and Mrs Julia Tecson.
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Festival of Hong Kong '92 at MOA
(2)
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1 |
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Preservation of Ainu Culture: Gifts from the Sapporo Aniu Cultural Society
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1 |
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Musqueam Weavers
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1 |
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The Copper that Came from Heaven: The Dance Dramas of the Kwakwaka'wakw
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Plantae Occidentalis: 200 Years of Botanical Art in British Columbia
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2 |
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Flowers
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1 |
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Musical instruments
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24 |
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Singing
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1 |
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Roman pottery
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2 |
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Subject 2
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Subject 4
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Education
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45 |
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Spiritual leaders
(1)
Utilisé pour :
Religous leaders
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3 |
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Textiles arts
(5)
Utilisé pour :
Fabric arts
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8 |
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Fine arts
(2)
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8 |
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Blankets
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37 |
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