Showing 596 results

Subjects
Subjects term Scope note Archival description count authority records count
Kaxlaya Gvilas, "the ones who uphold the laws of our ancestors"
  • April 24 - September 3, 2002
  • Contemporary art works from the Heiltsuk village of Waglisla (Bella Bella), B.C., and historical pieces from the Royal Ontario Museum’s R.W. Large Collection. We are honoured to host this extraordinary collection of rarely-seen objects, ranging from brightly-painted masks, carved figures, boxes, baskets, bows, walking sticks and staffs, to musical instruments, jewellery, tools, and fishing gear.
6 0
Kesú: The Art and Life of Doug Cranmer
  • March 17 - September 3, 2012 (The Audain Gallery)
  • CURATOR: Dr. Jennifer Kramer; MOA Curator, Pacific Northwest, and Associate Professor of Anthropology at UBC
  • Northwest Coast Kwakwaka’wakw art is renowned for its flamboyant, energetic, and colorful carving and painting. Among the leading practitioners was Doug Cranmer (1927- 2006), whose style was understated, elegant, and fresh, and whose work quickly found an international following in the 1960s. He was an early player in the global commercial art market, and one of the first Native artists in BC to own his own gallery. A long-time teacher, he inspired generations of young Native artists in his home village of Alert Bay and beyond. The exhibit shows a wide range of Doug’s artistic works in two and three dimensions in wood and paint, from totem poles, a canoe, masks, bentwood boxes, bowls, and prints, to his important “Abstract series” of paintings on mahogany plywood. Works and words by his students are also included in the exhibit, which is organized as a series of overlapping modules that reflect different aspects of the artist’s life and work. Dr. Jennifer Kramer, MOA Curator, Pacific Northwest, and Assistant Professor of Anthropology at UBC, curated the exhibit, and authored the accompanying book, which is available in the MOA Shop.
7 0
Knitting 3 0
K'omoks

Use for: Comox

  • The K'ómoks First Nation (KFN) traditional territory is the eastern portion of Vancouver Island from the Salmon River watershed in the north to the Englishman River watershed in the south. The territory includes all of the islands and portions of the BC mainland from Forward Harbour in the north to include the northwestern Texada Island and all of Denman and Hornby Islands in the south.
3 0
Krishna Worship at Nathdwara
  • April 5 - November 6, 1983 (Orientation Centre)
  • Student exhibition
0 0
Ktunaxa

Use for: Kutenai, Kootenay

109 0
Kwagiutl Graphics: Tradition in a New Medium
  • March 28, 1980 - December 31, 1981 (Theatre Gallery)
  • Student exhibition
4 0
Kwagiutl Masks: An Expression of Transformation
  • March, 1979 - February, 1980
  • Student exhibition
1 0
Kwagiutl Watercolours and Drawings
  • April 5, 1983 - June 17, 1984 (Theatre Gallery)
  • Student exhibition
1 0
Kwakwaka'wakw

Use for: Kwakkewlths, Kwakiutl

767 4
Kyuquot 76 1
Lakes 13 0
Lamas 3 0
Lamps from the Greek and Roman World 1 0
land 0 0
Landforms (1) 4 0
Landscapes 39 0
Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun: Unceded Territories
  • May 10 - October 16, 2016
  • CURATORS: Karen Duffek (MOA Curator, Contemporary Visual Arts & Pacific Northwest) and Tania Willard (artist and independent curator, Secwepemc Nation)
  • Vancouver artist Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, of Coast Salish and Okanagan descent, is showcased in this provocative exhibition of works that confront the colonialist suppression of First Nations peoples and the ongoing struggle for Indigenous rights to lands, resources, and sovereignty. Twenty years since his last major Canadian solo show, Unceded Territories will demonstrate the progression of Yuxweluptun’s artistry and ideas through hard-hitting, polemical, but also playful artworks that span his remarkable 30- year career, featuring a selection of brand-new works exhibited publicly for the first time. Co-curated by Karen Duffek (MOA Curator, Contemporary Visual Arts & Pacific Northwest) and Tania Willard (artist and independent curator, Secwepemc Nation), Unceded Territories promises colour and controversy through this display of over 60 of Yuxweluptun’s most significant paintings, drawings, and works in other media – a critical and impassioned melding of modernism, history, and Indigenous perspectives that records what the artist feels are the major issues facing Indigenous people today. This exhibition will undoubtedly fuel dialogue, indignation, and even spiritual awareness as it tackles land rights, environmental destruction, and changing ideas about what we can expect of Indigenous art from the Northwest Coast. The issues Yuxweluptun addresses are impossible to ignore.
5 0
Layers of Influence: Unfolding Cloth Across Cultures
  • November 17, 2016 - April 19, 2017.
  • CURATOR: Jennifer Kramer
  • From birth to death, humans are wrapped in cloth worn for survival, but more importantly, wear clothing as an external expression of their spiritual belief system, social status and political identity. This stunning exhibition will explore clothing’s inherent evidence of human ingenuity, creativity and skill, drawing from MOA’s textile collection — the largest collection in Western Canada — to display a global range of materials, production techniques and adornments across different cultures and time frames. Curated by Dr. Jennifer Kramer (MOA Curator, Pacific Northwest), Layers of Influence will entrance MOA visitors with large swaths of intricate textiles often worn to enhance the wearer’s prestige, power and spiritual connection, including Japanese kimonos, Indian saris, Indonesian sarongs, West African adinkra, adire and kente cloth, South Pacific barkcloth, Chinese Qing dynasty robes, Indigenous Northwest coast blankets, Maori feather cloaks and more. A sumptuous feast for the eyes, the exhibition is an aesthetic and affective examination of humanity’s multifaceted and complex history with cloth and its ability to amplify the social, political and spiritual influence of the wearer as a functional expression of self-identity.
4 0
Legacy Exhibit of Contemporary Northwest Coast Art
  • June 1 - September 30, 1976
1 0
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