
In MOA’s Drawers: Shinpan Neko No Tenarai
If you’re not sure where to begin in exploring the myriad of objects on display in the Multiversity Galleries, try finding this “amewsing” Japanese woodblock print.
Read MoreMOA is temporarily closed until June 2024 for seismic upgrades Learn more →
If you’re not sure where to begin in exploring the myriad of objects on display in the Multiversity Galleries, try finding this “amewsing” Japanese woodblock print.
Read MoreDespite measuring only 4.4 centimetres tall and a fraction of a centimetre wide, this Kwakwaka’wakw carving is no small feat.
Read MoreValdis Zatlers, former president of the Republic of Latvia, donates ceramic works from Latgale, the easternmost region of Latvia renowned for its traditional pottery, to MOA’s permanent collection.
Read MoreThe Museum of Anthropology will soon be home to a significant collection of historical and contemporary Indigenous artworks and a new Gallery of Northwest Coast Masterworks.
Read MoreI spent two months as an intern in conservation at MOA, as part of my MSc Conservation Studies degree through UCL in Qatar. My main…
Read MoreOn April 7, 2015 I participated in an author panel discussion called “Writing about First Nations” as part of the Association of Book Publishers of…
Read MoreSet on a concrete slab outside the MOA Centre for Cultural Research, is one of the museum’s newest acquisitions, a bronze sculpture by Montana artist…
Read MoreWe are proud to announce that the book The Transforming Image by MOA curators Bill McLennan and Karen Duffek has made the top 25 list of American…
Read MoreDr. Charles (Carl) E. Borden, late Professor Emeritus of Archaeology at the University of British Columbia and widely recognized as the Father of Archaeology in…
Read MoreHere is a photo of over 1920 spoons from “Barbara Robertson Gitxsan Donation.” The spoons had been stored for many decades in 2 trunks, along with…
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