Allied Artists’ Chinese Operatic Music Academy
- 21-2-L-190
- Dossier
- 1995
Fait partie de Elizabeth Johnson fonds
13183 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Allied Artists’ Chinese Operatic Music Academy
Fait partie de Elizabeth Johnson fonds
Fait partie de Collections Care, Management and Access fonds
Series includes records created by Allison Cronin during her time working in Collections at the Museum of Anthropology
Sans titre
Allison Cronin, Jill Baird interviewing Minnie Freeman at MOA bone game April 16/99
Fait partie de Public Programming and Education fonds
Fait partie de Public Programming and Education fonds
Allison Cronin's Digital File Backup
Fait partie de Collections Care, Management and Access fonds
File contains a CD with a digital backup of Allison Cronin's file while working at the Museum of Anthropology
Sans titre
Alone With the Past, 1913, Navajo, Arizona
Fait partie de Roland Reed collection
Image of a canyon in Arizona. Two figure are seen looking across a river toward an old (Navajo?) village at the base of the canyon wall.
Fait partie de MOA General Media collection
Display from the exhibit "North American Indian Basketry and Technology." Shows several examples of baskets. Many items for this exhibit were borrowed from the University of Washington to supplement the museum's collection.
Fait partie de Audrey Hawthorn (MOA Curator) fonds
Fait partie de Director's fonds
Fait partie de Director's fonds
Alumni [invitation and program for UBC alumni event in Toronto]
Fait partie de Director's fonds
Fait partie de Vickie Jensen and Jay Powell fonds
Fait partie de Nuno Porto fonds
File consists of news articles and other publications about the destruction of the Amazon rainforest collected while the exhibition was on display.
Amazonia - Collected research materials
Fait partie de Nuno Porto fonds
File includes newspaper and magazine clippings, museum pamphlets, blank postcards, a compact disc of photographs, and magazines used for exhibition research.
Amazonia - Gallery display publications
Fait partie de Nuno Porto fonds
File includes 10 coil-bound publications that were on display in the Gallery during the exhibit.
Amazonia [exhibit planning binder]
Fait partie de Director's fonds
Amazonia: The Rights of Nature
Fait partie de Exhibit Comment Books and Guest Registers/Guest Books collection
File contains 3 comment books from the Amazonia: The Rights of Nature exhibit, March 10, 2017 - January 18, 2018
Dates of comment books:
March 9, 2017 - July 5, 2017
July 6, 2017 - November 16, 2017
November 17, 2017 - February 16, 2018
Amazonia: The Rights of Nature
Fait partie de Nuno Porto fonds
Sub-series consists of records related to the exhibition "Amazonia: The Rights of Nature," which was on display at the Museum of Anthropology from March 10, 2017 - January 28, 2018. Porto was the curator for this exhibition.
The exhibition was described on the Museum of Anthropology's website as follows:
"Amazonia: The Rights of Nature explores the creative ideas that inspire Indigenous resistance to threats facing the world’s largest rainforest.
The exhibition features Amazonian basketry, textiles, carvings, feather works and ceramics both of everyday and of ceremonial use, representing Indigenous, Maroon and white settler communities. Today, these groups confront threats caused by political violence, mining, oil and gas exploration, industrial agriculture, forest fires and hydroelectric plants. Challenging visitors to examine their own notions towards holistic well-being, the exhibition covers more than 100 years of unsuspected relationships between Vancouver and Amazonian peoples, ideas and their struggles.
Amazonia departs from a social philosophy, known in Spanish as “buen vivir,” in which the concept of a good life proposes a holistic approach to development that intertwines notions of unity, equality, dignity, reciprocity, social and gender equality. The concept aligns directly with value systems intrinsic to Indigenous South American cultures, and serves as a rallying cry to move beyond Western ideals and practices of development and progress largely measured by profit.
The objects displayed in Amazonia have been exclusively assembled from MOA’s collection of acquisitions and donations. Included amongst the exhibition are items from Frank Burnett’s founding collection, donated to the University of British Columbia in 1927, ensuring the exhibition spans more than 100 years of exchange between Vancouver and Amazonian peoples.
Taking over MOA’s O’Brian Gallery, the exhibit’s items are primarily composed of simple, identifiable elements: vegetal fibers, wood, animal parts, clay or feathers. These uncomplicated components are transformed into extremely sophisticated and intricate textiles, basketry, ceramics, feather works and jewelry, displaying the knowledge and craftsmanship of some of the groups who reside in the region. Taken in its entirety, the exhibition promises to offer a revealing window into one of the world’s more culturally, socially and linguistically diverse regions, as well as a new framework for addressing some of the globe’s most pressing environmental challenges."
Amazonia: The Rights of Nature
Fait partie de MOA Publications and Ephemera collection
Amazonia: The Rights of Nature Media Coverage
Fait partie de Public Relations and Communications Office fonds
File consists of news and media clippings from the exhibition entitled Amazonia: The Rights of Nature, which ran from March 10, 2017 to January 28, 2018. The material was compiled by Murray Paterson Marketing Group.