Showing 194945 results

Archival description
214 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Wallace Clement
2023-024/003(07) · File · 1974-1976
Part of Leo Panitch fonds

File consists of documents related to Wallace Clement’s doctoral dissertation and defense, including Panitch’s review comments, as well as a paper written by Clement on “Social Classes and the Capitalist State” with Panitch’s comments and feedback.

Wall finishes
2024-006/004(03) · File · [194-?]
Part of Fred and Glenn Moffatt fonds

File consists of a graphic design showing children leaving hand prints on walls with text stating that the wall finishes are "easily cleaned with soap and water. Even ink stains wash off!!" The design is printed as a negative.

Walking with Dinosaurs
2017-036/004(09) · File · 2003
Part of Seth Feldman fonds

File consists of a paper by Seth Feldman titled, "Walking with Dinosaurs: Documenting the Post-Modern Cretaceous,"and includes his research material.

Walking around and waving
2019-061/001(01) · Item · [196-?]
Part of Home Made Visible collection

Item consists of Japanese family's home movie featuring family members walking around and walking.

Project and donor(s) contributed description follows: "Terry Watada became interested in his family history when he realized his parents were forced into internment camps by the Canadian government during World War II. The youngest of two boys and with an 18-year age gap, he only came to know this history in his late teens. The footage selected shows glimpses of Terry’s childhood and features community members with whom he grew up. A small clip shows Terry wearing his cub scout uniform. In 1959, he was eight-years-old and was part of the 45th cub scout "wolf pack"; he later became a scout until the age of 17.

The families on the farm near the beginning of the footage feature the Watada family visiting the Itos in Cooksville, Ontario. Mr. Ito had connections with Terry’s father when he lived in BC; Mr. Ito was a former employee of Matsujiro Watada. Because his father helped with the down payment of their farm, the Watadas would receive bushels of vegetables every season during Terry’s childhood.

A prominent feature of his childhood, Terry and his family attended organized community picnics along with other members of the Japanese Canadian community in Toronto. A game played was the catching of mochi balls. A coveted gift since the process to make it by hand was time consuming. The picnic near the end of the selected home movies depicts a Shinto lion dance (around 68’ or 69'). There were always religious undertones at these picnics, either Buddhist or Shinto along with the Obon festival that would take place every year. The religious undertone would shift as they became an event that no longer only catered to a Japanese audience."

Walker, Chas
2014-034 / 006 (18) · File · [Photocopied 198-?]
Part of Janice Newton fonds

File consists of a photocopied document pertaining to Chas Walker

Walela
2021-007/010(20) · File · 1997-2000
Part of Brian Wright-McLeod fonds

File contains press releases, clippings, biographical sheets, and photographs.

Wald/Zeller
2019-011/018(13) · File · 1974-2010
Part of Ray Ellenwood fonds

File pertains to Ellenwood’s friendship with artists Susana Wald and Ludwig Zeller. Included in the file are catalogs from their printing house Oasis Publications, pamphlets and other small print publications pertaining to Wald and Zeller’s individual works and joint exhibitions, as well as correspondence exchanged between Ellenwood, Wald and Zeller, letters of recommendation written by Ellenwood, a drawing in ink by Wald, a photograph of Wald and Zeller with daughter Beatriz Hausner, and a photograph of artist Václav Vaca.