booklet
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV011.44.9
- Description
- booklet; glossy cardstock cover in black; stapled binding; pages within numbered 1-16; index on verso of front cover; title in green ink reads: "magnificent / VANCOUVER" with photo montage of six photographs in grid below including view of downtown Vancouver, north shore mountains and Museum of Vancouver and Planetarium; Grouse Mountain gondala; Heritage Village Museum; Capilano Suspension Bridge; totem pole at University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology and Park and Tilford Gardens. Page 16 includes map with locations of these sites. Verso of back cover includes contact information for various sites.
- Object History
- Brochure of tourist sites in and around Vancouver including Heritage Village (Burnaby Village Museum) on pages 14-15. Collected by Century Park Museum Association and Heritage Village as part of their promotional materials.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Documentary Artifacts - - Other Documents
- Object Term
- Pamphlet
- Measurements
- w: 18 cm h: 21.5 cm
- Maker
- Lawson Graphics Pacific Limited
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Vancouver
- Title
- Magnificent Vancouver
- Publication Date
- [1979]
- Subjects
- Documentary Artifacts - Booklets
- Industries - Tourism
- Names
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Geographic Access
- Vancouver
Less detail
newsletter
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV020.5.2166
- Description
- Newsletter; five pages mimeographed on white paper. Heading at top of Newsletter reads: "THE VILLAGER" / "CENTURY PARK MUSEUM ASSOCIATION_BURNABY, B.C._JANUARY, 1975". Pages include illustrations. Newsletter is authored by Century Park Museum Association President, John Thomson and edited by Pixie McGeachie.
Page one includes information on the Century Park Museum Association's Annual General Meeting and Revision of Membership Fees. Page two to page four includes a list of "NOMINATIONS FOR OFFICERS AND DIRECTOR'S OF C.P.M.A. / FOR 1975" and "RETIRING BOARD MEMBERS". Page four includes an article with heading "OFF SEASON ACTIVITIES KEEP VILLAGE HUMMING" and page five includes an article with heading "VILLAGE OBTAINS CHINESE DISPLAY" and in open inviatation to the Burnaby Historical Society presentation "Hudson's Bay Company Days in Old B.C." presented by Dr. P. Akrigg from the University of British Columbia and a "LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT" John Thomson.
- Object History
- Newsletter published by the Century Park Museum Association in regards to news of Heritage Village Museum and the Century Park Museum Association, renamed Burnaby Village Museum Association and Burnaby Village Museum in 1984. The newsletter was mailed to members and prospective members of the Century Park Museum Association.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Documentary Artifacts - - Other Documents
- Object Term
- Serial
- Colour
- White
- Measurements
- Length: 35 cm x Width: 21.5 cm
- Maker
- Century Park Museum Association
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- Title
- The Villager
- Author
- Century Park Museum Association
- Publication Date
- January 1975
- Subjects
- Documentary Artifacts - Newsletters
- Names
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Century Park Museum Association
Less detail
painting
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV016.14.1
- Description
- Painting by Indigenous artist, Roy Hanuse titled "Thunderbird".
- This West Coast First Nations style painting was done on a manilla card stock folder and mounted on a black mat board. Painting consists of an underdrawing done in graphite and painted with red, black, green, blue and yellow gouache or tempera paint with some portions painted in a blue glossy paint.
- Handwritten title above painting reads "THUNDERBIRD"; painting is signed by the artist "ROY HANUSE".
- Object History
- Drawings were created in the early 1970s by Roy James Hanuse who was a Kwakwaka'wakw artist known for working in the traditional Kwakwaka'wakw style. Roy was born in 1943 in Bella Bella and lived at Rivers Inlet (Owikeno), British Columbia. Largely self-taught, Roy became interested in his cultural heritage while attending school in Alert Bay in the 1950s. Roy began painting in 1966 and wood carving in 1968. Some highlights of his art career included selling four paintings to the University of British Columbia which were later published in Audrey Hawthorn's "Kwakiutl Art Book" (1979) and carving a 12-foot totem for the Denver Art Museum (1972) and two totem poles that he carved for the Montreal Olympics (1976). Roy James Hanuse died in 2007.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Art
- Object Term
- Painting
- Colour
- Black
- Blue
- Green
- Red
- Yellow
- Measurements
- Overall measurements: wth 39 cm by ht 45 cm
- Maker
- Roy James Hanuse
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- School/Style
- Coast Salish
- Culture
- Kwakwaka'wakw
- Subjects
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia - Art
- Names
- Hanuse, Roy James
- Oakalla Prison Farm
Less detail
painting
- Repository
- Burnaby Village Museum
- Accession Code
- BV016.14.2
- Description
- Painting by Indigenous artist, Roy Hanuse titled "Killer Whale"
- This West Coast First Nations style painting was done on a manilla card stock file folder and mounted on a black mat board. Painting consists of an underdrawing done in graphite and painted with red, black and green gouache or tempera paint.
- Handwritten title above painting reads "KILLER WHALE"; painting is signed by the artist "ROY HANUSE".
- Object History
- Drawings were created in the early 1970s by Roy James Hanuse who was a Kwakwaka'wakw artist known for working in the traditional Kwakwaka'wakw style. Roy was born in 1943 in Bella Bella and lived at Rivers Inlet (Owikeno), British Columbia. Largely self-taught, Roy became interested in his cultural heritage while attending school in Alert Bay in the 1950s. Roy began painting in 1966 and wood carving in 1968. Some highlights of his art career included selling four paintings to the University of British Columbia which were later published in Audrey Hawthorn's "Kwakiutl Art Book" (1979) and carving a 12-foot totem for the Denver Art Museum (1972) and two totem poles that he carved for the Montreal Olympics (1976). Roy James Hanuse died in 2007.
- Category
- 08. Communication Artifacts
- Classification
- Art
- Object Term
- Painting
- Colour
- Black
- Green
- Red
- Measurements
- Overall measurements: wth 42.5 cm by ht 29.3 cm
- Maker
- Roy James Hanuse
- Country Made
- Canada
- Province Made
- British Columbia
- Site/City Made
- Burnaby
- School/Style
- Coast Salish
- Culture
- Kwakwaka'wakw
- Subjects
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia
- Indigenous peoples - British Columbia - Art
- Names
- Hanuse, Roy James
- Oakalla Prison Farm
Less detail