Striking stone against metal, Kwakwaka’wakw hereditary chief and carver Beau Dick (1955-2017) and his companions broke the Haida copper, Taaw on the steps of the Canadian Parliament buildings in 2014. This act was a call to action in dialogue with the Indigenous grassroots movement, Idle No More, and a revival of a shaming rite prohibited for over 60 years under the Indian Act. Following their journey to Ottawa, Taaw and the other coppers were displayed in the University of British Columbia Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery's 2016 exhibition, Lalakenis/All Directions: A Journey of Truth and Unity, described as both cultural belongings and living beings. The categories of belonging and being communicate ongoing and active relationships ...
Between 1884 and 1951 a ban on potlatching prohibited Indigenous communities of British Columbia fro...
In 2012, the Manitoba Museum began the development of an exhibit called “We Are All Treaty People”. ...
In the contemporary era, Indigenous nationhood exists at multiple scales. It’s most visible and reco...
Miskwabik, Metal of Ritual examines the thousands of beautiful and intricate ritual works of art—fro...
Musqueam artworks are not an unusual sight in Vancouver: wool weavings and carved sculptures welcome...
Here the processes and implications of cultural interactions occurring on the Northwest Coast of Nor...
This paper explores Indigenous use of copper metal to create objects of cultural importance on the N...
The repatriation of cultural property to First Nations is often guided by voluntary procedures devel...
"The catalogue offers visual documentation of the belongings that were gathered together and display...
Comments about the repatriation of Indigenous cultural belongings and reconciliation with Indigenous...
International audienceThe Lekwiltoq, one of the major tribes of the southern Kwagul, give to the ca...
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the relationship between the appearance of native coppe...
The Kwakwaka’wakw people, like all Indigenous peoples in Canada, have been dispossessed of their lan...
The archeological site of Aztalan has been an interest of archeologists since the mid-nineteenth cen...
Beads of copper are amongst the oldest and most widespread ornament forms known in North America. Na...
Between 1884 and 1951 a ban on potlatching prohibited Indigenous communities of British Columbia fro...
In 2012, the Manitoba Museum began the development of an exhibit called “We Are All Treaty People”. ...
In the contemporary era, Indigenous nationhood exists at multiple scales. It’s most visible and reco...
Miskwabik, Metal of Ritual examines the thousands of beautiful and intricate ritual works of art—fro...
Musqueam artworks are not an unusual sight in Vancouver: wool weavings and carved sculptures welcome...
Here the processes and implications of cultural interactions occurring on the Northwest Coast of Nor...
This paper explores Indigenous use of copper metal to create objects of cultural importance on the N...
The repatriation of cultural property to First Nations is often guided by voluntary procedures devel...
"The catalogue offers visual documentation of the belongings that were gathered together and display...
Comments about the repatriation of Indigenous cultural belongings and reconciliation with Indigenous...
International audienceThe Lekwiltoq, one of the major tribes of the southern Kwagul, give to the ca...
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the relationship between the appearance of native coppe...
The Kwakwaka’wakw people, like all Indigenous peoples in Canada, have been dispossessed of their lan...
The archeological site of Aztalan has been an interest of archeologists since the mid-nineteenth cen...
Beads of copper are amongst the oldest and most widespread ornament forms known in North America. Na...
Between 1884 and 1951 a ban on potlatching prohibited Indigenous communities of British Columbia fro...
In 2012, the Manitoba Museum began the development of an exhibit called “We Are All Treaty People”. ...
In the contemporary era, Indigenous nationhood exists at multiple scales. It’s most visible and reco...