Salish Images: Northwest Coast Artists Tribute to Salish Art
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- January 28 - February 9, 1986. A commercial exhibition.
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Salmon
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Sankofa: African Routes, Canadian Roots
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- November 4, 2021 – March 27, 2022
- CURATORS: Nya Lewis (founder + director, BlackArt Gastown), Nuno Porto (MOA Curator, Africa), Titilope Salami (PhD candidate, Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory, UBC)
- Sankofa is the idea of moving forward while reaching back to connect to one’s heritage. It is the notion that taking pride in heritage helps us to move into the future. Sankofa comes from the Ghanaian Akan language, and the word and its essence have been adopted by many African and Black people around the globe as an expression of cultural and political affirmation. Sankofa: African Routes, Canadian Roots looks at some of the divergent—and often fragmented—paths of political mobilization and cultural assertion that African and Black people in the diaspora have taken. Centered on works by contemporary artists from Lagos, Nigeria, and Vancouver, in conversation with objects in MOA’s permanent collection, this exhibition shares stories, histories and projects of African and Black affirmation. In particular, it draws connections to historical contributions and the growing vitality of Black Canadians in Vancouver. Ultimately, Sankofa: African Routes, Canadian Roots celebrates different ways of understanding the world through the lenses of African and Black communities, the wealth of their cultural and art practices, and their inspiring legacy.
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Savage Graces: After Images by Gerald McMaster
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Sculpture
Use for:
Statue
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Sculptures by Dominic Benhura
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- February 6-11, 2007 (Museum Lobby)
- Dominic Benhura is an acclaimed Zimbabwean artist credited for his contributions in transforming Shona stone sculpture into a world-class modern art. The sculptures shown here attest to his ability to portray human feeling through form and movement rather than facial expression.
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Secwepemc
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Seeing is Believing: Photographs from the Archives
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- 2007
- There are more than 90,000 historic photographs in the Archives at the Museum of Anthropology. The collection is worldwide, covers a multitude of subjects, and dates from the early 1900s to the present day. This exhibit reveals only a tiny portion of this hidden gem, yet hints at the remarkable potential of this collection for scholars, researchers, and visitors. Geographically, the collection includes images from the Northwest Coast of British Columbia, the Southwest United States, South America, and various areas of Asia, Oceania and Africa. Institutionally, the collection documents the people and events that were instrumental in the history and growth of the Museum.
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Selected Garments from Asia, North and South America and Europe
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Selected Works from MOA’s First Nations Print Collection
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- February 3 - April 12, 1998
- In this exhibit, MOA showcases works from its collection of over 300 Northwest Coast prints by such artists as Joe David (Nuu-chah-nulth), Robert Davidson (Haida), Freda Diesing (Haida), Walter Harris (Gitksan), Tony Hunt (Kwakwaka’wakw), Susan Point (Musqueam), and Roy Henry Vickers (Tsimshian).
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Sensibilities: Unsuspected Harmonies in Multicultural Aesthetics
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- October 27, 1982 – June 5, 1983 (Gallery 5)
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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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Shadows, Strings and Other Things: The Enchanting Theatre of Puppets
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- May 16, 2019 – October 14, 2019
- CURATOR: Nicola Levell (Associate Professor, Anthropology, UBC)
- Over 250 puppets, old and new, from 15 countries, are illuminated in MOA’s dramatic new exhibition. These exquisite puppets—sometimes charming, sometimes a little bit scary, and always entertaining—come together and reveal our enduring fascination with storytelling. For thousands of years, knowledge holders and storytellers around the world have engaged puppets as a means to dramatize the human experience. Puppets have been delighting, entertaining and educating audiences of all ages, letting our imaginations soar. Puppets are the precious purveyors of our epics, dreams and satires. Enter into a theatrical world of kings and queens, demons and clowns, supernatural beings and more. Extraordinary stories and fantastical characters fill the stages, cases and multimedia installations of this enchanting exhibition. Whether animated using age- old techniques or digital technologies, puppets are manipulated by hand, and here you’ll discover more about the different forms of manipulation and animation that give them life: shadow, string, rod, hand, and stop-motion. With a focus on Asia, Europe and the Americas, the exhibition draws from MOA’s stunning international collection of puppets—the largest in Western Canada-—and reveals new acquisitions from China, Brazil, Sicily, Java, the UK and France. Shadows, Strings and Other Things is an immersive experience that illuminates how puppetry continues to evolve and innovate in the hands of artists and performers who keep the tradition alive. From graceful Vietnamese water puppets and comical British hand puppets to the captivating stop-motion puppet animation of the award-winning Indigenous artist Amanda Strong—the full spectrum of human resilience and creativity is on display.
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Shake Up: Preserving What We Value
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- December 2, 2018 – Fall 2019
- CURATORS: Jill Baird and Jennifer Kramer
- Earthquakes have long been a part of the reality of living along the Northwest Coast. At MOA, preparation for this reality is a priority of monumental proportions as the Museum’s iconic Great Hall undergoes major seismic upgrades to help preserve the building, the collections and cultural heritage. In conjunction with this immense undertaking, MOA’s exhibition, Shake Up: Preserving What We Value, explores the convergence of earthquake science and technology with the rich Indigenous knowledge and oral history of the living cultures represented in MOA’s Northwest Coast collection. Beyond scientific discoveries, Shake Up also puts into the foreground traditional knowledge of earthquakes and natural disasters that has been passed down through generations throughout many cultures. Through multimedia installations, contemporary First Nations art and cultural objects, Shake Up explores the connection between cultural knowledge and natural seismic events. Bringing together the perspectives of cultures, arts and sciences, this exhibition reflects on what we value and how we preserve it. The exhibition will be displayed in areas throughout the Museum, and visitors will have the opportunity to see the majestic poles of the Great Hall undergo important conservation work while they are temporarily stored in the adjacent O’Brian Gallery. Shake Up: Preserving What We Value is the first of two exhibitions at MOA to explore the theme of natural disasters and their implications. A Future for Memory: In the Aftermath of the 3/11 Disaster, curated by MOA’s Curator of Asia, Fuyubi Nakamura, is slated to open in early 2020. Based on research from the past seven years, its focus will be on changing physical and psychological landscapes in the aftermath of 2011 earthquake in Japan, and consider its local and global resonances.
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Ship
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Ships
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Show and Tell: The Story of the Big Mac Box
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- April 5, 1983 - June 1984 (Orientation Centre)
Student exhibition: The box, its friends, foes and ancestors.
- Student exhibition: The box, its friends, foes and ancestors.
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sid and
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Signed Without Signature: Works by Charles & Isabella Edenshaw
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- November 26, 2010 – September, 30, 2011 (Gallery 3)
- From the late 1800s to the early 1900s, Charles and Isabella Edenshaw produced Haida art that continues to inspire the finest Haida artists of today, many of whom are their descendants. What is the aesthetic that makes their work recognizable and so respected? How has it remained contemporary for more than 100 years? This exhibit addresses these and other questions by highlighting Charles Edenshaw’s engraved silver bracelets, as well as his wife Isabella’s basketry, which Charles painted. Join curator Bill McLennan at 7 pm on Tuesday, November 30 for a talk and tour of the exhibit. Media sponsor The Georgia Straight.
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Singing
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