Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Anonymous Donor Gives Hundreds Of Indigenous Works To B.C. Museum

10 Nov, 2016 12:44 PM
    VANCOUVER — An extensive collection of indigenous art valued at about $7 million is being given to the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia by an anonymous donor.
     
    At more than 200 pieces, the museum says it's believed to be the largest collection of northwest coast First Nations art to return to B.C. in decades.
     
    The museum says in a news release that the donor was first inspired to start collecting after seeing totem poles in Vancouver's Stanley Park in the 1970s.
     
    The donation includes rare historical works, carvings, jewelry, basketry and textiles by West Coast artists like Bill Reid, Charles Edenshaw and Isabel Rorick.
     
    The art will be housed in a new Gallery of Northwest Coast masterworks, funded with a $3-million donation from Montreal charity the Doggone Foundation and a $500,000 grant from the federal government.
     
    The Museum of Anthropology's director, Anthony Shelton, says the artwork has been on a remarkable journey after originally being created in the northwest coast and is now back home in B.C. where it can be shared.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mother Sues Airline For Flying 5-year-old Son To Wrong City

    Mother Sues Airline For Flying 5-year-old Son To Wrong City
    Maribel Martinez filled a lawsuit Friday over the Aug. 17 mix-up involving her son, Andy.

    Mother Sues Airline For Flying 5-year-old Son To Wrong City

    US Internet Users Avid Readers Of Books On Mahatma Gandhi

    US Internet Users Avid Readers Of Books On Mahatma Gandhi
    Internet users in the United States at the second spot on the list of readers of books and writings on Mahatma Gandhi, even though he never visited America in his lifetime, showed a analytics report of a prominent website on the Father of the Nation.

    US Internet Users Avid Readers Of Books On Mahatma Gandhi

    World's Longest, Highest Glass Bridge In China Reopens

    World's Longest, Highest Glass Bridge In China Reopens
    The world's longest and highest glass bridge in China's Hunan province has been reopened for the public.

    World's Longest, Highest Glass Bridge In China Reopens

    Jacob Hall, 6-Year-Old US School Shooting Victim Dead

    Jacob Hall, 6-Year-Old US School Shooting Victim Dead
      Citing Anderson County Coroner Greg Shore, Greenville Online reported that Hall died on Saturday afternoon and an autopsy is scheduled in Anderson on Sunday.

    Jacob Hall, 6-Year-Old US School Shooting Victim Dead

    He Popped The Question, She Fainted. Wedding Proposal Goes Viral

    He Popped The Question, She Fainted. Wedding Proposal Goes Viral
    The video, all of seven seconds long, shows the exact moment a man popped the question to his girlfriend, and she... wait for it... fainted at that precise moment.

    He Popped The Question, She Fainted. Wedding Proposal Goes Viral

    Watch: This Ukrainian Motorist Built His Own Lamborghini Reventon

    Watch: This Ukrainian Motorist Built His Own Lamborghini Reventon
    Oleg Hrycak, a sports car enthusiast from the Ukrainian city of Lviv, spent four years building his very own limited edition Lamborghini Reventon. He admits it was a lot of work, but it beats having to pay over $2 million for a real one.

    Watch: This Ukrainian Motorist Built His Own Lamborghini Reventon