Images of Imperial Power: Coins, keys, seals, weights, and sculptures from the Roman and Byzantine Courts
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- January 20 - March 15, 1981 (Gallery 9)
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Ancient Crossroads: The Rural Population of Classical Italy
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- December 5, 1978 - February 11, 1979
- An exhibition of classical antiquities excavated in Southern Italy at the Note Irsi and San Giovanni di Ruoti, Basilicata.
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Reflections of India: Paintings from the 16th to the 19th Century
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- January 8 - February 11, 1980 (Gallery 9)
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The Legacy: Contemporary British Columbia Indian Art
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- Opened on June 10, 1976. Exhibition consisted of works by leading contemporary artists and craftspeople of the Northwest Coast, primarily carvings, jewellery, paintings, and weaving. The collection was commissioned as part of British Columbia's centennial celebrations, supported by the provincial government and put together in 1971. It was put together by Gloria Cranmer Webster, Peter McNair, and Wilson Duff.
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Traditional Arts of Korea: Adornment, Costumes, and Ceramics
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- October 1977 – January 31, 1978
- Covers periods from the 6th century A.D. to the 20th century. Comprised of artifacts in the collections of the Museum of Anthropology and private collections in Vancouver.
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Kwagiutl Masks: An Expression of Transformation
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- March, 1979 - February, 1980
- Student exhibition
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Savage Graces: After Images by Gerald McMaster
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Inside Passage: 1792
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- September 14, 1993 - February 27, 1994 (Gallery 10)
- Guest curators Cole Harris and Robert Galois trace the British and Spanish expeditions through British Columbia’s Inside Passage.
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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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Masterworks of Haida Artist Bill Reid
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- Opened June 28, 1994.
- This spring, MOA’s collection of Bill Reid’s masterworks in wood, silver, and gold will be placed on permanent display.
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Echoes '96
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- April 12 - May 31, 1996
- Student exhibition: This exhibit features ceramic works by students from Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. Using the museum’s collection as a resource, they examined the social, technical and artistic history of ceramics, and each produced for this exhibit a ceramic piece that echoes a past technology, form, decorative technique or iconographic message. The exhibit is the result of a collaboration between the museum and the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design.
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The Art of Norval Morrisseau
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- May 2 - September 30, 2000 (Gallery 5)
- This is a travelling exhibition organized by the Glenbow Museum, Calgary. Featured are twenty-eight masterworks by Ojibway artist Norval Morrisseau.
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Kaxlaya Gvilas, "the ones who uphold the laws of our ancestors"
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- 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.
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Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas: Meddling in the Museum
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- July 10, 2007 - April 28, 2008
- Haida artist Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas mixes it up at MOA with three site-specific installations inspired by the Museum’s current Renewal Project. Michael’s works incorporate media as diverse as car hoods and copper leaf (“Coppers from the Hood”), argillite dust and an entire canoe-bearing Pontiac Firefly (“Pedal to the Meddle”), and archaeology storage trays and Haida manga (“Bone Box”). In the process, he brings his own brand of humour, narrative, and social commentary to jumpstart new debates in the Museum’s changing spaces. Installations curated by Karen Duffek, Curator, Contemporary Visual Arts. Thanks to Canada Council for the Arts for their support of this project.
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Pleased to Meet You: Introductions by Gwyn Hanssen Pigott
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- November 3, 2012 - March 24, 2013 (The O'Brian Gallery)
- In her own celebrated work, Australian ceramic artist Gwyn Hanssen Pigott nudges pale-glazed tableware forms into still-life groupings of bowls, bottles and cups. Individually familiar, the juxtaposed forms speak to one another and to the observer with surprising emotion. In this exhibition, Ms. Pigott has selected objects from the Museum’s permanent, world-wide collection and re-assembled them, with her own works, in surprising new relationships. The “introductions” have been made based on colour, form, and pattern, often featuring objects that are normally never displayed together. The pieces are not placed within any historical or cultural context; rather they are grouped to illustrate that, regardless of social or cultural background, makers share similar aesthetic choices when making decisions about the creation of their work. Gwyn Hanssen Pigott is recognized as one of Australia’s most significant contemporary artists and has exhibited extensively in Australia, America, Europe and Asia. In 2002 she was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the arts as a ceramic artist and teacher. The exhibition is curated by MOA Curator Dr. Carol E. Mayer and Susan Jefferies, past curator of Modern and Contemporary Ceramics at the Gardiner Museum, Toronto.
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Voices of the Canoe
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- 2013 Online exhibition: http://www2.moa.ubc.ca/voicesofthecanoe/
- Learn about the canoe traditions of the Fijian, Squamish, and Haida people and understand the historical and ongoing importance of canoe culture for these Indigenous peoples. The site features interviews from Indigenous artists, canoe makers, and others to encourage students to consider multiple points of view, and to question what is historically significant and what evidence is used to determine historical significance. It also hosts a range of evidence – photographs, maps, interviews, historical texts and short films. This website was developed by MOA in conjunction with The History Education Network/Histoire et Education en Reseau (THEN/HiER).
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Sewing Dissent: Patterns of Resistance in Chile
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- November 24, 1987 - February 28, 1988 (Gallery 9)
- An exhibition of patchwork and embroidery wall hangings - traditional folk art that became a form of protest against the harsh conditions of life for Chile’s poor. The project was made possible through the support of the Salt Spring Island Voice of Women.
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Repair, Reuse, and Recycle
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- February 18 - May 24, 1992 (Gallery 9)
- Student exhibition: Japanese, Indian, Chinese, Philippine, Dutch, Salish, and Peruvian textiles are used to highlight how various peoples prolong the life of household goods and clothing. This exhibit continues MOA’s long-term commitment to “recycle” its entire world-wide collection of textiles from protective darkness to public view
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Proud to be Musqueam: Dedicated to Our Children
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- May 24 - July 1988 (Theatre Gallery)
- People have lived at Musqueam for at least 3,000 years. Over the last century the City of Vancouver has grown up around the Reserve created at this ancient site. In this exhibit of archival photographs and oral history, two Musqueam women, Verna Kenoras and Leila Stogan, tell the story of their people over the last one hundred years. Cosponsored by the Musqueam Band Council.
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The Fabric of Our Land: Salish Weaving
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- November 19, 2017 – April 15, 2018
- CURATOR: Sue Rowley
- For generations Salish peoples have been harvesting the resources of their territories, transforming them into robes of rare beauty and power. Symbols of identity they acted as legal documents and were visible signifiers of the presence of knowledge holders and respected people. Now mostly stored away in museums these masterworks are rarely seen. They have much knowledge to share and many stories to tell. Musqueam asked the Museum to bring these weavings to inspire weavers and share part of this rich legacy with all of us. Salish weavers selected ten blankets from the 1800s to be part of this unique exhibition. Returning from Finland, Scotland, England and the eastern United States this is the first time that these blankets have been seen in Vancouver. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see the unique design of Salish blankets up close and to learn the rich history and significance of weaving in this region. The exhibition takes you on a journey through the past two hundred years of Salish weaving from the early 1800s through to today’s vibrant renaissance. Presented by Musqueam, MOA and a community of Salish weavers.
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