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  1. From Cultural Salvage to Brokerage: The Mythologization of Mungo Martin and the Emergence of Northwest Coast Art. Aaron Glass, Aaron Glass. Aaron Glass is an anthropologist and artist who works primarily with Kwakwaka'wakw (Kwakiutl) people in British Col ...

  2. 7. Juli 2013 · Mungo Martin: ‘10 times a chief’. Posted by twpaterson on Jul 7, 2013 in Articles | 5 comments. So his people called the bespectacled old man in mackinaw who worked for years in the cold wind of an open shed in Victoria’s Thunderbird Park. It was fitting title for this remarkable self-appointed guardian of a heritage threatened by extinction.

  3. Bruce McKean. In 2021, alumnus Bruce McKean (BA ‘70) made a gift of $1.5 million to establish the Chief Mungo Martin Research Chair in Indigenous Mental Health at the University of Victoria. The role of the chair, in UVic’s Department of Psychology, will be to develop mental-wellness research and learning that is informed by engagement with ...

  4. Chief Mungo Martin (1879-1962) Copper (tłakwa) 1958Copper | 66.0 x 31.0 x 1.5 cm (whole object) | RCIN 69833 Grand Vestibule, Windsor Castle

  5. Title: Untitled. Creator: Chief Nakaṕankam, Mungo Martin. Creator Lifespan: 1881/1962. Creator Nationality: Canadian, Kwagu’ł. Creator Birth Place: Tsaxis (Fort Rupert) Date: 1960. Location: Victoria. Physical Dimensions: w425 x h348 mm. Artist's biography: Chief Nakaṕankam, Mungo Martin, was born about 1881 in the Kwagu’ł village of ...

  6. Mungo Martin fished, made and sang songs (at secret potlatches) and carved untill 1948-49. (Nuytten) Mungo Martin had memorized hunderds of songs, even from Haida and Tsimshian; Mungo was "a vast store of knowledge". (Robinson) Mungo was "frequently hired to carve or sing for underground potlatches", but also had to fish to support his family ...

  7. In line with UVic’s commitment to truth, respect, and reconciliation, I am honoured to serve as the inaugural Chief Mungo Martin Research Chair in Indigenous Mental Health. Through engagement with Indigenous partners and communities, my goal is to make positive impacts in Indigenous mental health and wellbeing through community-based research, teaching, clinical training, and mentorship.