Showing 587 results

Subjects
Subjects term Scope note Archival description count authority records count
The Transforming Image (Book) 2 0
The Transmission of Knowledge: The Guru-Shishiya Tradition
  • March 21 – June 4, 1996
1 0
The Tribal Societies and Control of the Supernatural
  • 1963
21 0
The Village is Tilting: Dancing AIDS in Malawi
  • February 6 - September 3, 2007
  • The Village is Tilting: Dancing AIDS in Malawi features a series of masks, photographs, and videos documenting the depth of awareness and cultural response to the AIDS pandemic by rural Malawians. More than a plaintive victim's cry, The Village is Tilting uses elements of Gule Wamkulu itself - dance, drama, dialogue, and humour - to strip away conventional images of AIDS to reveal its inextricable links to an interconnected set of conditions and causes: poverty, gender inequality, and civil injustice. The exhibition is guest curated and assembled by Vancouver-based photographer Douglas Curran, who has documented the Chewa mask culture for over ten years.
6 0
The Whiteman in North America c. 1970 - 1980
  • October 27, 1987 - January 31, 1988 (Theatre Gallery)
  • A look at white urban culture through the lens of Iroquois artist/photographer Richard Hill. This exhibit is part of the Indian Modern series and was made possible through the support of the Canada Council.
3 0
The World of Spirits: An Exhibition of Igbo Masks from South East Nigeria
  • July 4 - August 31, 1977
  • Student exhibition: A M.A. thesis exhibition prepared by Emmanuel Onwuzolum.
4 0
Three Case Studies
  • Thru December, 2000
  • Three exhibit cases highlight different aspects of Northwest Coast art. One features several turn-of-the-century paddles; another offers selections from a remarkable recent bequest of Northwest materials collected by Tom and Frances Richardson. A third presents two contemporary works by master artist Dempsey Bob (Tahltan) alongside an older Tlingit piece from the Museum’s collections.
1 0
Through My Eyes 6 0
Tibetan Robes
  • 1985
3 0
Tibetan Thangka Paintings by Kalsang Dawa
  • November 1, 2006 - January 14, 2007 (Lower Lobby)
  • Buddhism was introduced to Tibet in the seventh century, and since that time Tibetan Buddhist sacred art has grown and flourished. The Tibetan word ?thangka? refers to a work done on cloth and set in a silk or cotton frame. In this small exhibit, MOA is pleased to present several works by Kalsang Dawa, a master practitioner in the Thangka style.
0 0
Tipis

Use for: Teepees, Tepees

19 0
Tla'amin

Use for: Sliammon

2 0
Tlingit

Use for: Taku

32 0
To Market, to Market . . . The Culture Exchange
  • March 31 – August 15, 1989 (Gallery 9)
  • Student exhibition: In this exhibition, Museum Studies students explore some of the intriguing dimensions of buying a piece of another culture. This multi-part study examines the influences and impact tourism has on the production of cultural objects; the ingenuity of the producers in meeting expectations; the conflict inherent in selling sacred images; and the multiple roles objects play in the lives of the purchasers.
0 0
To Wash Away the Tears
  • March 2003
  • Student exhibition: Based on a memorial for Maggie Pointe of the Musqueam Nation, the exhibit includes a contemporary 14-foot West Coast style canoe and its contents donated by Shane Pointe and Gina Grant. This is the first exhibition curated at MOA by UBC’s Critical Curatorial Studies graduate students.
5 0
Tobacco pipes

Use for: Pipes, tobacco

3 0
Together Again: Nuxalk Faces of the Sky
  • April 5 - September 30, 2013 (Multiversity Galleries)
  • Student exhibition: This small exhibit was developed by students as part of ANTH431. It featured two Nuxalk sun masks and their corona and documented how the components were separated in the past and then reunited through this exhibit. This exhibit then traveled to the Seattle Art Museum for display. Curator: Dr. Jennifer Kramer.
0 0
Totem Park 183 0
Totem park 15 0
Totem poles 1431 0
Results 501 to 520 of 587