- 119-3-B
- Subseries
- 1975 - 1996
Part of Director's fonds
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Part of Director's fonds
Wakas pole raising 1987 photographs
Consists of photographs documenting the raising of the Wakas Pole in Stanley Park in 1987.
Part of MOA Shop fonds
Part of Carol Mayer fonds
We Sing to the Universe: Poems and Drawings by Ron Hamilton
Part of David Cunningham fonds
David Cunningham
We Sing to the Universe: Poems and Drawings to Ron Hamilton
Part of Darrin Morrison fonds
This exhibit was the first public display of drawings and poems by Nuu-chah-nuulth artist Ron Hamilton.
Part of Elizabeth Johnson fonds
Subseries consists of notes pertaining to the exhibit “Wearing Politics, Fashioning Commemoration: Factory Printed Cloths of Ghana”. This was a student exhibit by Michelle Willard. The exhibit was coordinated by Elizabeth Johnson. This exhibit was installed at MOA in February 2004.
Elizabeth Lominska Johnson
Wearing Politics, Fashioning Commemoration: Factory Printed Cloths in Ghana
Part of Darrin Morrison fonds
This exhibit was created by UBC graduate student Michelle Willard, and housed a collection of printed cloths that Ghanaians’ considered to be highly significant and shows how they are worn in Ghana to proclaim political loyalties and commemorate important events.
Weaving Worlds Together exhibit and Musqueam Weavers source book development
Sub-series consists of textual records for the West Coast art exhibit organized by Ron Hamilton and Marjorie Halpin. Records include Hamilton’s biography, exhibit correspondence, project proposal and exhibit planning. Also included is a transcript from a taped interview of Ron Hamilton by Karen Duffek in 1989.
West Coast Photographs project
Sub-series consists of textual records and graphic images related to a project by Halpin and Ron Hamilton that attempted to document the lineage of a native community through photographs. Included are correspondence requesting the use of photographs, grant application forms, and photocopies of potential photographs for the project.
Sub-series consists of textual records related to attempts to receive funding to replicate West Coast artifacts for the Museum of Anthropology collection.
Consists of photographs, in the form of negatives, prints and slides, taken during the period that Jensen and Powell lived and worked in the Western Gitxsan villages. The images include photographs that were used to illustrate the language books being produced, and other photographs that documented the culture and way of living in these communities.
Part of Carol Mayer fonds
What is Canadian cultural property?
Part of Elizabeth Johnson fonds
Subseries consists of a photograph of Elizabeth Johnson with a group of individuals standing in front of the exhibit What is Canadian cultural property?
Elizabeth Lominska Johnson
Subseries consists of images from the exhibition When World Collide.
Subseries contains records related to the <i>Where are the Children?</i> exhibit held by MOA. Curated by Jeff Thomas, and circulated by the Aboriginal Healing Foundation in Ottawa, this exhibition presented a series of historical photographs documenting the history of residential schools in Canada. The records include correspondence related to exhibit loans, temporary exhibit preliminary and finalized designs and a reference manual for setting up the exhibition.
Where are the children? Healing the legacy
Subseries consists of photographic slides of the Where are the Children? Healing the Legacy exhibition held from June to December of 2002.
Where the people gather documents and photographs
Subseries consists of documents and photographs relating to the research, writing, and publication of Where the People Gather: Carving a Totem Pole (1992). Records include: permission forms, draft text, correspondence, book reviews, event records, research materials, and author notes.
Where the People Gather recordings
Subseries consists of audio recordings and transcripts of interviews regarding totem poles, speakers include Norman Tait, Hope Allen Tait, Wayne Young, Robert "Chip" Tait, Howard Green, Isaac Tait, and Reva Robinson.