News
Extravagant glamour between the wars
Museum of Vancouver to exhibit Art Deco women’s fashions from the 1920s and 1930s
(VANCOUVER, BC) – The design style known as art deco began in Paris in the 1920s and quickly gained worldwide popularity. Here in Vancouver, we see the art deco’s geometry-inspired style captured in the architecture of the Marine Building and the Burrard Street Bridge. Starting March 8, the public can also see it captured in women’s fashions of the 1920s and 1930s on display in Art Deco Chic: Extravagant glamour between the wars at the Museum of Vancouver.
“The garments chosen for exhibition have been selected because of their beauty and fine quality,” explains guest co-curator Ivan Sayers. “Some of the most important fashion designers in the world in the 1920s and 1930s will be represented.”
The fashion design of the era was a distinct departure from previous design styles. Drawing inspiration from geometric shapes to evoke elegance and modernity, it was also influenced by an increased ability to travel world wide – bringing inspiration not only from modernism, but from faraway places such as Russia, Egypt, and Mexico.
Visitors will enjoy more than 66 garments on display in this exhibition.
Notable Vancouver items include a black beaded gown worn to the opening of the Commodore Cabaret in 1929 and a red and gold lamé evening dress made from fabric depicting the battles of the Trojan War. Many items on show are exquisite designer dresses with labels such as Chanel, Lanvin, Vionnet, Patou, and Schiaparelli. To contrast these high fashion items is a piece from the MOV’s collection – a modest, yet stylish, navy polka dot dress made by the Aurora Dress Company of Vancouver around 1927.
The garments and accessories on display come from the private collections of Ivan Sayers and Claus Jahnke, as well as from the MOV and other’s collections. Handbags, hats, shoes, and jewelry will further illustrate the use of geometric shapes to create sleek, sophisticated designs.
For Immediate Release
November 16, 2011
Type: Community Event / Family Day
Winter Wander celebrates Vanier Park, a Vancouver hidden treasure
(Vancouver, BC) – Vanier Park is a cultural hub that many Vancouver residents know little about, and on Saturday, December 3 the six cultural institutions that call Kitsilano’s biggest park home will be celebrating this hidden treasure with a significantly reduced rate for visitors.
“Music, history, space, sea, and Shakespeare reside together in stunning Vanier Park,” says Christopher Gaze, Artistic Director of Bard on the Beach. “It is truly a Vancouver treasure.”
Vanier Park is home to the Maritime Museum, the Museum of Vancouver, the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre, Bard on the Beach, Vancouver Academy of Music, and the City of Vancouver Archives – offering visitors a fascinating range of cultural experiences within easy walking distance of each other.
The Winter Wander in Vanier Park is a one day event in which Vancouverites and their families can enjoy a taste of what all Vanier Park’s cultural institutions have to offer for one rate that includes all venues (Note Bard on the Beach will be located at the MOV, as the tents are currently down). Adult admission will be just $5 to visit all locations, and children 16 and under will visit for free. Venues open at 10am and close at 5pm.
“Before it became Vanier Park, this area was first a First Nations fishing village, then a Royal Canadian Air Force station,” explains Simon Robinson, Executive Director of the Maritime Museum. “We are fortunate that the Vancouver Parks Board started managing the land in 1966 thereby allowing the space to become public park land and a cultural hub. It's quite unique, but sometimes overlooked as a great destination. Today it’s a place where Vancouverite’s can spend the day enjoying the beauty of the park, visiting museums, taking in a play, learning music, or discovering Vancouver’s history.”
Winter Wanderers will also be able to enjoy food from visiting food trucks, performances by Vancouver Academy of Music students, and have an opportunity to win memberships to the three participating museums.
The Winter Wander is supported by Port Metro Vancouver.
MEDIA RELEASE
November 14, 2011
Image: First contribution to the Museumof Vancouver from 1896, a trumpeter swan
Image: The first record taken for the Museum of Vancouver
Museum of Vancouver’s 70,000 item collection now accessible online
(VANCOUVER, BC) – Vancouverites can now broaden their understanding of Vancouver history with the click of a mouse, thanks to the Museum of Vancouver’s newly launched digital collections database.
Using OpenMOV from the Museum of Vancouver’s website (http://openmov.museumofvancouver.ca/collection) anyone from anywhere can access information about the museum’s more than 62,000 items, with nearly 10,000 entries currently accompanied by digital images.
“With open MOV, we were able to update the old electronic database while opening the collection to the public. OpenMOV allows the public virtual access to objects when they are not on display,” explains Wendy Nichols, the MOV’s Curator of Collections. “Increasingly, museums are finding that allowing their communities to access the collections digitally not only connects people to history, but also stimulates museum going.”
The digital database was developed with support from the Museums Assistance Program of the Department of Canadian Heritage. OpenMOV was custom-made for MOV using Drupal open source content management system by Vancouver-based Fuse Interactive.
MOV will continue to flesh out and refine artifact information and to increase the number of objects accompanied by digital images. The creation of digital images has been made possible in part by the BC History Digitization Project through the Irving K. Barber Centre at UBC. The Project has supported digitizing all material in the BC First Nations ethnology collection over the last two years.
The digital collection metaphorically throws the doors open to the back-room shelves of MOV. With the information now online, researchers can access images and information about the collection from their desks at home or school.
About the Museum of Vancouver
The Museum of Vancouver is a non profit museum that holds a mirror to the city and lead provocative conversations about its past, present and future.
(VANCOUVER, BC) – When people migrate, they bring their cultural memories with them and create a unique understanding of the world. Migrating Landscapes, a nation-wide competition for young Canadian architects 45 and under, explores the nature of contemporary Canadian migration through original designs for housing. Vancouverites can immerse themselves in this idea starting Thursday, November 3 when the regional stage of the competition launches at the Museum of Vancouver.
“The intention of the competition is to bring the Venice Biennale to Canada,” explains Johanna Hurme, one of the three young Winnipeg-based organizers and curators of Migrating Landscapes. “We want to showcase the up-and-coming generation of Canadian architects and designers to the Canadian public before they hit the world stage in Venice.”
The exhibition will display videos, in which each entrant talks about how their experiences of migration have affected them as designers, together with architectural models of dwellings that respond to the issues raised in the videos. These videos and models will be “settled” into a modular exhibition infrastructure, or “new landscape”, made of wood.
“When people migrate, they carry with them very specific memories of place and cultural heritage,” explains Hurme. “These migrated memories have to negotiate with their new locale and culture, resulting in an experience in which an immigrant never settles or unsettles.”
“When applied to architecture and design,” adds her colleague Jae-Sung Chon, “the built form is neither of the present location or the past. Instead, it’s a unique form that resonates with both locations and one’s own cultural memories.”
“We think Migrating Landscapes will be a timely and provocative exhibition,” says Sasa Radulovic, who completes the curatorial team. “It will generate and showcase innovative new designs for housing by young Canadians, confront the closing down of immigration policies globally, and project Canada as one of the most engaging and promising models of a multi-ethnic social democracy in the 21st century.”
The Museum of Vancouver is one of seven presenting hosts of the regional competitions across the country. Regional winners will progress to a national final competition and exhibition at the Winnipeg Art Gallery next spring, where a high-profile national jury will select the young, architectural “Team Canada” that will represent Canada at the 13th annual Venice Biennale in Architecture in late summer/fall 2012.
The BC Regional Exhibition of Migrating Landscapes is at the Museum of Vancouver from November 3 to November 27.
Popular bhangra exhibition to celebrate extension with full day of activities for families
(VANCOUVER, BC) — Following recognition by CBC’s Culture Days for its contribution to the community, the Museum of Vancouver is pleased to announce an extension of its unique, community-based exhibition, Bhangra.me: Vancouver’s Bhangra Story. To celebrate, the MOV will host a unique family-oriented day of interactive exhibition programming, food, and performances on Saturday, October 22, from 10am-4pm.
MOV’s family-oriented “Not Just Bhangra” festivities will appeal to all ages, featuring a Special Senior's Lounge, photobooth, and guided mini-tours of Bhangra.me by co-curator Naveen Girn and board members from VIBC.
“The day’s activities will provide an opportunity that we seldom have—to bring grandparents and grandchildren, Bhangra professionals and amateurs, all in the same space talking, learning and exploring the culture of Bhangra,” says Manpal Rana, a performer, editor of Chakdey.com and member of VIBC’s Community Engagement Committee.
Lunch is included with admission, and will be provided by Sutra Vancouver; admission includes access to the MOV's history galleries, and its newest exhibition, Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver.
Space is limited, so advance purchase strongly encouraged. Tickets are online at http://notjustbhangra.eventbrite.com .
Bhangra.me tells a vibrant Canadian story as it traces the major moments in the local bhangra scene. In addition to early costumes, photos, rare videos and albums, the exhibition features interviews and memorabilia from international artists Jazzy B, Harbhajan Mann, Delhi 2 Dublin, En Karma, and many more.
Bhangra.me is co-presented by the MOV and the Vancouver International Bhangra Celebration Society. It was curated by the MOV’s Curator of Contemporary Issues, Viviane Gosselin, and Guest Curator, Naveen Girn. Designed by local designers, Propellor Studio, the exhibition was created from original interviews, archival video footage, personal photo albums, community consultations, and support from Vancouver’s bhangra community. Over 55 interviews and 100 hours of documentary footage were compiled for the exhibition.
Originally set to close October 23, Bhangra.me will now be open until January 1, 2012.
(VANCOUVER, BC) – Explore Vancouver’s gritty, urban past at the Museum of Vancouver’s (MOV) upcoming feature exhibition, Neon Vancouver/Ugly Vancouver. Opening October 13, 2011 Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver presents a fascinating look at the rapid growth of neon signs throughout the 50s, 60s and 70s, and the visual purity crusade that virtually banished them from Vancouver streets.
“The exhibition raises interesting questions about how we collectively construct the way our city is portrayed,” says Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver curator, Joan Seidl, Director of Exhibitions and Collections at MOV. “There was a real push in the 60s and 70s to redefine Vancouver as a green, natural space. While we may love neon today, there was a real outcry against neon signs, which represented a more industrial, urban city.”
The Museum of Vancouver has partnered with the Queer Film Festival and Options for Sexual Health to launch the extraordinary photography exhibit Chosen Family Portraits.
Chosen Family Portraits is a project where the Festival audience were asked to model with their chosen families and to share their stories. A total of 28 families visited the portrait studio to pose with their loved ones, bffs, kids, parents, neighbours, allies and whomever they considered chosen family.
The families and media are invited to view their family portraits on display at the Museum of Vancouver on Tuesday August 2nd and it will be open to the public on Wednesday August 3rd until late September.
After completing their critically acclaimed book The 100-Mile Diet, James MacKinnon and Alisa Smith embarked on a North American tour that took them to some of the greatest and most unheralded local food hotspots today. What they discovered were dozens of inventive and effective local projects that point toward a very different future for food. Join us on November 25th when they will share the top ten findings from their travels at the Museum of Vancouver’s Food and Beers Speaker Series event.
Museum of Vancouver presents Fox, Fluevog & Friends: The story behind the shoes, May 14 to September 26, 2010
Meet John Fluevog, Peter Fox and Ken Rice: friends, collaborators, trend-spotters, businessmen, and artists. MOV’s fashion retrospective explores the story behind their footwear companies, from their early days making the scene in 1970s Gastown to acclaim and powerful brand loyalty on an international scale.
Museum of Vancouver (MOV) presents Tracing Night, February 4 to April 11, 2010. Presented with Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad.
Toronto-based visual artist, Ed Pien has become widely known for what have been called his “magical” paper maze installations. Tracing Night is one of the most celebrated of the series – this glowing labyrinth combines drawing, video projections and haunting soundscapes to recreate the phenomenon of night and darkness.
VANCOUVER, BC - The Museum of Vancouver will launch Ravishing Beasts, a provocative, visual study of taxidermy, and a look at the Museum’s own history of collecting. On view from October 22, 2009 to February 28, 2010, the exhibit features over 110 species, about two-thirds of its extensive natural-history holdings.
We interfered with, altered, and rearranged Stanley Park’s forests, creatures and people to make nature more ‘natural’. With “The Unnatural History of Stanley Park” exhibit, the Vancouver Museum sheds some light on puzzling blind spots in our romance with this national treasure, which turns 120 this year.
Pages
Extravagant glamour between the wars
Museum of Vancouver to exhibit Art Deco women’s fashions from the 1920s and 1930s
(VANCOUVER, BC) – The design style known as art deco began in Paris in the 1920s and quickly gained worldwide popularity. Here in Vancouver, we see the art deco’s geometry-inspired style captured in the architecture of the Marine Building and the Burrard Street Bridge. Starting March 8, the public can also see it captured in women’s fashions of the 1920s and 1930s on display in Art Deco Chic: Extravagant glamour between the wars at the Museum of Vancouver.
“The garments chosen for exhibition have been selected because of their beauty and fine quality,” explains guest co-curator Ivan Sayers. “Some of the most important fashion designers in the world in the 1920s and 1930s will be represented.”
The fashion design of the era was a distinct departure from previous design styles. Drawing inspiration from geometric shapes to evoke elegance and modernity, it was also influenced by an increased ability to travel world wide – bringing inspiration not only from modernism, but from faraway places such as Russia, Egypt, and Mexico.
Visitors will enjoy more than 66 garments on display in this exhibition.
Notable Vancouver items include a black beaded gown worn to the opening of the Commodore Cabaret in 1929 and a red and gold lamé evening dress made from fabric depicting the battles of the Trojan War. Many items on show are exquisite designer dresses with labels such as Chanel, Lanvin, Vionnet, Patou, and Schiaparelli. To contrast these high fashion items is a piece from the MOV’s collection – a modest, yet stylish, navy polka dot dress made by the Aurora Dress Company of Vancouver around 1927.
The garments and accessories on display come from the private collections of Ivan Sayers and Claus Jahnke, as well as from the MOV and other’s collections. Handbags, hats, shoes, and jewelry will further illustrate the use of geometric shapes to create sleek, sophisticated designs.
For Immediate Release
November 16, 2011
Type: Community Event / Family Day
Winter Wander celebrates Vanier Park, a Vancouver hidden treasure
(Vancouver, BC) – Vanier Park is a cultural hub that many Vancouver residents know little about, and on Saturday, December 3 the six cultural institutions that call Kitsilano’s biggest park home will be celebrating this hidden treasure with a significantly reduced rate for visitors.
“Music, history, space, sea, and Shakespeare reside together in stunning Vanier Park,” says Christopher Gaze, Artistic Director of Bard on the Beach. “It is truly a Vancouver treasure.”
Vanier Park is home to the Maritime Museum, the Museum of Vancouver, the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre, Bard on the Beach, Vancouver Academy of Music, and the City of Vancouver Archives – offering visitors a fascinating range of cultural experiences within easy walking distance of each other.
The Winter Wander in Vanier Park is a one day event in which Vancouverites and their families can enjoy a taste of what all Vanier Park’s cultural institutions have to offer for one rate that includes all venues (Note Bard on the Beach will be located at the MOV, as the tents are currently down). Adult admission will be just $5 to visit all locations, and children 16 and under will visit for free. Venues open at 10am and close at 5pm.
“Before it became Vanier Park, this area was first a First Nations fishing village, then a Royal Canadian Air Force station,” explains Simon Robinson, Executive Director of the Maritime Museum. “We are fortunate that the Vancouver Parks Board started managing the land in 1966 thereby allowing the space to become public park land and a cultural hub. It's quite unique, but sometimes overlooked as a great destination. Today it’s a place where Vancouverite’s can spend the day enjoying the beauty of the park, visiting museums, taking in a play, learning music, or discovering Vancouver’s history.”
Winter Wanderers will also be able to enjoy food from visiting food trucks, performances by Vancouver Academy of Music students, and have an opportunity to win memberships to the three participating museums.
The Winter Wander is supported by Port Metro Vancouver.
MEDIA RELEASE
November 14, 2011
Image: First contribution to the Museumof Vancouver from 1896, a trumpeter swan
Image: The first record taken for the Museum of Vancouver
Museum of Vancouver’s 70,000 item collection now accessible online
(VANCOUVER, BC) – Vancouverites can now broaden their understanding of Vancouver history with the click of a mouse, thanks to the Museum of Vancouver’s newly launched digital collections database.
Using OpenMOV from the Museum of Vancouver’s website (http://openmov.museumofvancouver.ca/collection) anyone from anywhere can access information about the museum’s more than 62,000 items, with nearly 10,000 entries currently accompanied by digital images.
“With open MOV, we were able to update the old electronic database while opening the collection to the public. OpenMOV allows the public virtual access to objects when they are not on display,” explains Wendy Nichols, the MOV’s Curator of Collections. “Increasingly, museums are finding that allowing their communities to access the collections digitally not only connects people to history, but also stimulates museum going.”
The digital database was developed with support from the Museums Assistance Program of the Department of Canadian Heritage. OpenMOV was custom-made for MOV using Drupal open source content management system by Vancouver-based Fuse Interactive.
MOV will continue to flesh out and refine artifact information and to increase the number of objects accompanied by digital images. The creation of digital images has been made possible in part by the BC History Digitization Project through the Irving K. Barber Centre at UBC. The Project has supported digitizing all material in the BC First Nations ethnology collection over the last two years.
The digital collection metaphorically throws the doors open to the back-room shelves of MOV. With the information now online, researchers can access images and information about the collection from their desks at home or school.
About the Museum of Vancouver
The Museum of Vancouver is a non profit museum that holds a mirror to the city and lead provocative conversations about its past, present and future.
(VANCOUVER, BC) – When people migrate, they bring their cultural memories with them and create a unique understanding of the world. Migrating Landscapes, a nation-wide competition for young Canadian architects 45 and under, explores the nature of contemporary Canadian migration through original designs for housing. Vancouverites can immerse themselves in this idea starting Thursday, November 3 when the regional stage of the competition launches at the Museum of Vancouver.
“The intention of the competition is to bring the Venice Biennale to Canada,” explains Johanna Hurme, one of the three young Winnipeg-based organizers and curators of Migrating Landscapes. “We want to showcase the up-and-coming generation of Canadian architects and designers to the Canadian public before they hit the world stage in Venice.”
The exhibition will display videos, in which each entrant talks about how their experiences of migration have affected them as designers, together with architectural models of dwellings that respond to the issues raised in the videos. These videos and models will be “settled” into a modular exhibition infrastructure, or “new landscape”, made of wood.
“When people migrate, they carry with them very specific memories of place and cultural heritage,” explains Hurme. “These migrated memories have to negotiate with their new locale and culture, resulting in an experience in which an immigrant never settles or unsettles.”
“When applied to architecture and design,” adds her colleague Jae-Sung Chon, “the built form is neither of the present location or the past. Instead, it’s a unique form that resonates with both locations and one’s own cultural memories.”
“We think Migrating Landscapes will be a timely and provocative exhibition,” says Sasa Radulovic, who completes the curatorial team. “It will generate and showcase innovative new designs for housing by young Canadians, confront the closing down of immigration policies globally, and project Canada as one of the most engaging and promising models of a multi-ethnic social democracy in the 21st century.”
The Museum of Vancouver is one of seven presenting hosts of the regional competitions across the country. Regional winners will progress to a national final competition and exhibition at the Winnipeg Art Gallery next spring, where a high-profile national jury will select the young, architectural “Team Canada” that will represent Canada at the 13th annual Venice Biennale in Architecture in late summer/fall 2012.
The BC Regional Exhibition of Migrating Landscapes is at the Museum of Vancouver from November 3 to November 27.
Popular bhangra exhibition to celebrate extension with full day of activities for families
(VANCOUVER, BC) — Following recognition by CBC’s Culture Days for its contribution to the community, the Museum of Vancouver is pleased to announce an extension of its unique, community-based exhibition, Bhangra.me: Vancouver’s Bhangra Story. To celebrate, the MOV will host a unique family-oriented day of interactive exhibition programming, food, and performances on Saturday, October 22, from 10am-4pm.
MOV’s family-oriented “Not Just Bhangra” festivities will appeal to all ages, featuring a Special Senior's Lounge, photobooth, and guided mini-tours of Bhangra.me by co-curator Naveen Girn and board members from VIBC.
“The day’s activities will provide an opportunity that we seldom have—to bring grandparents and grandchildren, Bhangra professionals and amateurs, all in the same space talking, learning and exploring the culture of Bhangra,” says Manpal Rana, a performer, editor of Chakdey.com and member of VIBC’s Community Engagement Committee.
Lunch is included with admission, and will be provided by Sutra Vancouver; admission includes access to the MOV's history galleries, and its newest exhibition, Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver.
Space is limited, so advance purchase strongly encouraged. Tickets are online at http://notjustbhangra.eventbrite.com .
Bhangra.me tells a vibrant Canadian story as it traces the major moments in the local bhangra scene. In addition to early costumes, photos, rare videos and albums, the exhibition features interviews and memorabilia from international artists Jazzy B, Harbhajan Mann, Delhi 2 Dublin, En Karma, and many more.
Bhangra.me is co-presented by the MOV and the Vancouver International Bhangra Celebration Society. It was curated by the MOV’s Curator of Contemporary Issues, Viviane Gosselin, and Guest Curator, Naveen Girn. Designed by local designers, Propellor Studio, the exhibition was created from original interviews, archival video footage, personal photo albums, community consultations, and support from Vancouver’s bhangra community. Over 55 interviews and 100 hours of documentary footage were compiled for the exhibition.
Originally set to close October 23, Bhangra.me will now be open until January 1, 2012.
(VANCOUVER, BC) – Explore Vancouver’s gritty, urban past at the Museum of Vancouver’s (MOV) upcoming feature exhibition, Neon Vancouver/Ugly Vancouver. Opening October 13, 2011 Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver presents a fascinating look at the rapid growth of neon signs throughout the 50s, 60s and 70s, and the visual purity crusade that virtually banished them from Vancouver streets.
“The exhibition raises interesting questions about how we collectively construct the way our city is portrayed,” says Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver curator, Joan Seidl, Director of Exhibitions and Collections at MOV. “There was a real push in the 60s and 70s to redefine Vancouver as a green, natural space. While we may love neon today, there was a real outcry against neon signs, which represented a more industrial, urban city.”
The Museum of Vancouver has partnered with the Queer Film Festival and Options for Sexual Health to launch the extraordinary photography exhibit Chosen Family Portraits.
Chosen Family Portraits is a project where the Festival audience were asked to model with their chosen families and to share their stories. A total of 28 families visited the portrait studio to pose with their loved ones, bffs, kids, parents, neighbours, allies and whomever they considered chosen family.
The families and media are invited to view their family portraits on display at the Museum of Vancouver on Tuesday August 2nd and it will be open to the public on Wednesday August 3rd until late September.
After completing their critically acclaimed book The 100-Mile Diet, James MacKinnon and Alisa Smith embarked on a North American tour that took them to some of the greatest and most unheralded local food hotspots today. What they discovered were dozens of inventive and effective local projects that point toward a very different future for food. Join us on November 25th when they will share the top ten findings from their travels at the Museum of Vancouver’s Food and Beers Speaker Series event.
Museum of Vancouver presents Fox, Fluevog & Friends: The story behind the shoes, May 14 to September 26, 2010
Meet John Fluevog, Peter Fox and Ken Rice: friends, collaborators, trend-spotters, businessmen, and artists. MOV’s fashion retrospective explores the story behind their footwear companies, from their early days making the scene in 1970s Gastown to acclaim and powerful brand loyalty on an international scale.
Museum of Vancouver (MOV) presents Tracing Night, February 4 to April 11, 2010. Presented with Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad.
Toronto-based visual artist, Ed Pien has become widely known for what have been called his “magical” paper maze installations. Tracing Night is one of the most celebrated of the series – this glowing labyrinth combines drawing, video projections and haunting soundscapes to recreate the phenomenon of night and darkness.
VANCOUVER, BC - The Museum of Vancouver will launch Ravishing Beasts, a provocative, visual study of taxidermy, and a look at the Museum’s own history of collecting. On view from October 22, 2009 to February 28, 2010, the exhibit features over 110 species, about two-thirds of its extensive natural-history holdings.
We interfered with, altered, and rearranged Stanley Park’s forests, creatures and people to make nature more ‘natural’. With “The Unnatural History of Stanley Park” exhibit, the Vancouver Museum sheds some light on puzzling blind spots in our romance with this national treasure, which turns 120 this year.
For media inquiries, please contact:
Marketing Officer
The Press Kit for Neon Vancouver | Ugly Vancouver includes:
- the press release
- biographies of the curator, Joan Seidl, and exhibition designers
For high resolution photos and media inquiries, please contact:
Marketing Officer
The attached press kit includes:
- press release
- exhibition team biographies
- backgrounder on the Museum of Vancouver
- image info sheet
Media preview is schedule for Tuesday, March 6, at 11:00am. Please RSVP to Amanda (see below).
To request high resolution images or to schedule an interview, please contact:
Amanda McCuaig
Marketing Officer
amccuaig@museumofvancouver.ca
604.730.5309
