Intangible: Memory and Innovation in Coast Salish Art September 13 to December 10, 2017, Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art, Vancouver BC Intangible: Memory and Innovation in Coast Salish Art from Kate Hennessy on Vimeo. The exhibition ‘Intangible: Memory and Innovation in Coast Salish Art’ runs from September 13 to December 10, 2017 at the Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art, Vancouver […]
The Making Culture Lab has been working with the UN’s One Planet Network on the production of a series of 360° videos and the design of their installation at the UN Headquarters in NYC as part of the Camp One Planet exhibit at the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development July 9-18, 2018. The […]
360° Video for Sustainability
Led by Kate Hennessy (in collaboration with Trudi Lynn Smith, Craig Campbell, Stephanie Takaragawa, and Fiona P. McDonald), the Ethnographic Terminalia Collective is in the process of designing and creating a digital archive that will document the work of the collective Since 2009, the Ethnographic Terminalia Collective has staged annual exhibitions and projects in major North American […]
The Ethnographic Terminalia Archive
CEDHI is the Critical Ethnography and Digital Heritage Initiative, a Canada Foundation for Innovation / British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund supported media production and research studio. It is a partnership between Dr. Jan Marontate (SFU School of Communication) and Dr. Kate Hennessy (SFU School of Interactive Arts and Technology). CEDHI is dedicated to designing innovative methods […]
CEDHI
Residue: Proximal Interactions is a video by Trudi Lynn Smith and Kate Hennessy. It is a part of the exhibition Stranger Lands at 500X Gallery in Dallas, Texas, curated by Julie Libersat. It runs from May 6 – June 6 2017. Residue is an ongoing project that documents examples of anarchival materiality in archives. Chemical reactions, mould, rot, […]
Residue: Proximal Interactions
The Making Culture Lab is thrilled to have worked in collaboration with the Stó:lo Research and Resource Management Centre, the Scowlitz First Nation, Ursus Heritage Consulting, and a diverse project team of archaeologists, software developers and designers. With funding from the Virtual Museum of Canada, we worked from 2012 to 2017 to produce an exhibit titled Sq’éwlets: […]
digital sqewlets.ca
Ethnographic Terminalia | No longer content to theorize the ends of the discipline and possibilities of new media, new locations, or new methods of asking old questions, Ethnographic Terminalia is working in capacity to develop generative ethnographies that do not subordinate the sensorium to the expository and theoretical text or monograph. Ethnographic Terminalia is an initiative designed […]
Ethnographic Terminalia
ʔeləw̓k̓ʷ – Belongings: A Tangible Table in c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city at the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia | c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city is an historic partnership of three Vancouver institutions: the Musqueam Indian Band, the Museum of Vancouver, and the Museum of Anthropology at the University […]
ʔeləw̓k̓ʷ – Belongings
Collectors Among Us: Museum of Vancouver Students in Kate Hennessy’s Moving Images class (IAT 344), with MCL PhD student and Teaching Assistant Rachel Ward, have exhibited 8 short documentaries in the Museum of Vancouver’s All Together Now exhibition that runs until Jan. 8, 2017. Over the semester, we collaborated with MOV curator Viviane Gosselin to connect with Vancouver residents […]
Collectors Among Us: Museum of Vancouver
THE INUVIALUIT LIVING HISTORY PROJECT In 2009, Inuvialuit Elders, youth, seamstresses, cultural experts, and media producers from the Inuvialuit Settlement Region in the Canadian north traveled with a group of anthropologists, archaeologists, and educators from the south to research and document the Smithsonian’s MacFarlane Collection at the National Museum of Natural History. This collection is […]