The mortuary house being reassembled
- 132-1-C-A-a040614
- Item
- 1978?
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image shows the mortuary house while it was being reassembled.
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The mortuary house being reassembled
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image shows the mortuary house while it was being reassembled.
The mortuary house being reassembled
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image shows the mortuary house while it was being reassembled.
The mortuary house being reassembled
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image shows the mortuary house while it was being reassembled.
The mortuary house partly reassembled
Part of MOA General Media collection
The mortuary house stands partly reassembled as part of its relocation from Totem Park.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the "Mediterranean Exhibit." Shows replicas of many important works of Bronze Age Greece.
The North Alaskan Kantangotigit Relationship
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Exchange… What is it?" Exhibit was for a student honours thesis by Jill Willmott. Inuit boots, figurine, and ulu displayed.
Part of Pam Brown fonds
The Respect to Bill Reid Pole Virtual Exhibit
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "The Shaman of the Northwest Coast." Features a mask and salmon figures.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for an exhibit. Likely for "Tribal Control of the Supernatural." Prominently displays four Sxwayxwey masks.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for an exhibit. Likely for "Tribal Control of the Supernatural". Prominently displays four Sxwayxwey masks.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Technologies of the North West Coast." Shows objects used for fishing.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for an exhibit. Likely for "Tribal Control of the Supernatural." Displays several items including a staff, carved figures, and rattles. A Sxwayxwey mask is visible in the far right corner of the image.
The shaman of the northwest coast was primarily a healer
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "The Shaman of the Northwest Coast." Shows photographs of individuals.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "The Shaman of the Northwest Coast." Several items displayed including a mask and a bone figurine.
The Spirit of Islam: Experiencing Islam Through Calligraphy
The Spirit of Islam: Experiencing Islam through Calligraphy
Part of Darrin Morrison fonds
This exhibition introduces the aesthetics, spirituality, and principles of education related to the world of Islam, through example of Islamic art and calligraphy.
The Spirit of Islam: Experiencing Islam through Calligraphy
Part of Skooker Broome fonds
Subseries consists of records relating to the “Spirit of Islam: Experiencing Islam through Calligraphy” exhibit installed at the Museum of Anthropology. The exhibit is a collaborative work with local Muslim community members. The intent of the exhibition is to promote cultural diversity and to illustrate Islam as a way of life. The exhibition opened in October 2001, and continued until May 2002. In his capacity as Designer, Skooker Broome worked on the planning, designing, and installation of the exhibit. Not only did he work on the exhibit, he also participated in the launching of the “Spirit of Islam” educational website. Funded by the Department of Canadian Heritage, the website includes images, text, audio, and video from the original exhibition. Records in the subseries include: correspondence, contact lists, exhibition records, draft proposals and proposal, budgets, artifact lists, program planning worksheets, committee reports and drafts, agendas, grant applications, programming planning worksheets, minutes of meetings, loan condition and agreement forms, statements of agreements, exhibition diagrams and plans, exhibition design and art work, exhibit panel information and labeling designs, exhibit flyers and design layouts, photocopies of business cards and business cards, press releases, negatives, drafts of catalogue, notes, policy records, publications, exhibit sketches, letterhead samples, typeface samples, Islamic script samples, exhibition invitation cards, computer renderings of the exhibition layout and design, fundraising records, and product brochures and price lists. Textual records also include annotations on “Post-It Notes.” All records relate to aspects of planning, creating, or installing of the exhibit.