Affichage de 574 résultats

Sujets
Sujets terme Note sur la portée et contenu description archivistique décompte fichier d'autorité décompte
Salish Exhibit: Spindle Whorls
  • [19-?]
3 0
Four Seasons: Seasonal Activities of Prehistoric Indian Peoples in B.C.
  • [1984]
  • A series of panels depicting seasonal activities.
2 0
Metal Works 4 0
Museum Quality: Significant Acquisitions Purchased for the Museum's Permanent Collection by the Anthropology Shop Volunteers
  • November 16, 1983 - March 4, 1984 (Rotunda)
3 0
Chilean Arpilleras
  • [199-?]
1 0
Robert Davidson: The Abstract Edge
  • June 22, 2004 – January 30, 2005 (Gallery 5)
  • The Abstract Edge will bring together thirty works by Davidson with five 19th century Northwest Coast artefacts. Many of the contemporary works belong to Davidson and are being created specially for this exhibition; some will be borrowed from public and private collections. The contemporary works will include paintings on a variety of materials, sculptural works and sketchbooks. The historical objects will be drawn from the Museum and other collections.
48 0
Gathering Strength: New Generations in Northwest Coast Art
  • 1999 - 2004
  • To mark our 50th Anniversary in 1999, the Museum created a new gallery space to highlight the richness of Northwest Coast art, past and present, and the significant relationships with First Nations that continue to inform and inspire the work of the Museum itself.
11 0
Raven and the First Immigrant
  • (after The Raven and the First Men by Bill Reid, 1980)
  • March 12 - December 31, 2010 (on patio adjacent to Bill Reid Rotunda)
  • Nicholas Galanin (b. 1979) is an artist of Tlingit ancestry who lives and works in Sitka, Alaska. Trained through apprenticeship and formal study in wood carving, metalwork, and tool making, he uses a range of media, including sculpture and video, to expand his own practice and investigate how “Northwest Coast art” is situated in relation to cultural values, contemporary issues, and global art worlds. His new work, Raven and the First Immigrant, is on display on the patio just outside the Bill Reid Rotunda, directly facing Reid's iconic sculpture, The Raven and the First Men.
3 0
Border Zones: New Art Across Cultures
  • Exhibition to inaugurate The Audain Gallery at MOA
  • January 23-September 12, 2010 (The Audain Gallery)
  • Border Zones: New Art Across Cultures was an exhibition of work by twelve artists engaged in a dialogue about cultural boundaries: Hayati Mokhtar, Dain Iskandar Said, John Wynne, Edward Poitras, T. Shanaathanan, Tania Mouraud, Marianne Nicolson, Gu Xiong, Prabakar Visvanath, Rosanna Raymond, Ron Yunkaporta, and Laura Wee Láy Láq. In place of a printed catalogue, an interactive webzine was created for local, national, and international writers, reviewers, artists, and students to develop and share ideas related to the exhibit. To view the webzine, visit http://moa.ubc.ca/borderzones/. Border Zones was curated by Karen Duffek, MOA Curator of Contemporary Visual Arts & Pacific Northwest.
23 0
Cycles: The Graphic Art of Robert Davidson, Haida
  • October 30, 1979 - February 3, 1980 (Gallery 5)
8 0
New Visions: Serigraphs by Susan A. Point, Coast Salish Artist
  • January 2 - March 30, 1986
1 0
The Flute and the Sword
  • April 2 - July 26, 1987 (Theatre Gallery)
  • Student exhibition: exhibition that featured popular religious poster art that explores the passionate nature of two Hindu deities, Krishna and Kali.
  • Madrona Exposition Centre, Nanaimo, BC Travelling February 3 – 17, 1988. Delta Museum and Archives, Delta, BC Travelling March 15 – May 3, 1988
0 0
Chinese Peasant Textile Arts: Kwantung and Szechuan Provinces
  • April 12 - June 15, 1977
  • Student exhibition
2 0
Wayang: From Gods to Bart Simpson
  • June 11 – November 14, 1991
1 0
Huacos and Huacas: Objects from Sacred Places of Ancient Peru
  • April 5 - June 15, 1977
  • Student exhibition: An exhibition by the students of Fine Arts 461 and 561.
2 0
Bo'jou Neejee: Profiles of Canadian Indian Art
  • October 19 - December 31, 1976.
  • Exhibition consisted of artifacts from Indigenous communities of the Plains, Great Lakes, and Eastern Woodland Indians during the period 1750 to 1850. The exhibition was assembled by the National Museum of Man, Ottawa, and consisted of objects from the collections of the Speyer family of Germany, and James Du Pres, the third Earl of Caledon of Tyrona, Ireland.
1 0
Ouroboros: A Major Work by Stephen C. Clark 6 0
Gifts and Giving
  • October 4, 1988 - January 1989 (Gallery 5)
  • Donations are an important part of MOA’s collections and this highly visual exhibit displays some of the Museum’s recent acquisitions. Artifacts on display are from North America, Asia, South America and Europe. The Museum’s collections are expanding rapidly and with this exhibit, MOA wishes to acknowledge the vital role of donors in contributing to the growth.
4 0
Doug Cranmer's Paintings
  • March 29 - Summer 1994
  • An exhibit featuring paintings by 'Namgis artist Doug Cranmer. The works are from a series of experimental paintings Doug Cranmer produced in the mid-1970s.
1 0
Raven's Reprise: Contemporary Works by First Nations Artists
  • March 15, 2000 - January 14, 2001 (throughout the galleries)
  • This exhibition presents fourteen site-specific works in diverse media (sculpture, mixed media, photography, painting, and textiles) by five contemporary Northwest Coast artists: Mary Anne Barkhouse (Kwakwaka’wakw) Connie ‘Bear’ (Sterritt) Watts, (Nuu-chah-nulth, Gitxsan, Kwakwaka’wakw), Winidi/John Powell (Kwakwaka’wakw), Larry McNeil (Nisga’a), and Marianne Nicolson (Kwakwaka’wakw).
7 0
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