To complement Ben Huberman’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Heritage this week with his photo and description of the moving Reconciliation Pole on the University of British Columbia campus here in Vancouver these photos are also from the UBC Campus and the magnificent Museum of Anthropolgy. I have previously posted about the late great Haida artist Bill Reid’s The Raven and The First Men, which has pride of place in the Museum. Today’s images are a selection from that same visit, which I made on Remembrance Day, 2014.
The following description of the museum is taken from the
MOA web site
“The Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia is world-renowned for its collections, research, teaching, public programs, and community connections…MOA houses one of the world’s finest collections of Northwest Coast First People’s art in an award-winning building designed by Canadian architect Arthur Erickson. Opened in 1976, the concrete and glass structure is based on the post-and-beam structures of northern Northwest Coast First Nations. MOA’s Great Hall displays huge totem poles, feast dishes, and canoes from the Kwakwaka’wakw, Nisga’a, Gitxsan, Haida, and Coast Salish peoples, while smaller pieces in gold, silver, argillite, wood, and other materials are exhibited elsewhere in the galleries.”
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Beautiful Andrew!
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Many thanks Nicole
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It is a stunning building with beautiful displays; your photos really do it justice. How did you manage to get the first one with no other people in it?!
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Thanks Bunty. Timing is everything 🙂
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Love that museum – hope to get back there before too long –
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Oh wow! I wish we’d had a chance to visit the Museum of Anthropology when we were in Vancouver two years ago. I wanted to, but we ended up going to Bill Reid’s gallery in the downtown area, walking distance from our hotel. The gallery was awesome though!
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You’ll just have to come back 😊
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