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Archival Description
Halifax (N.S.) Image With digital objects
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Photograph of an artifact and wall texts

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The wall texts read:
“Like the hunter, I draw the beast to prepare myself for the hunt. Only then can I become the beast.
Hunters, they can kill.”

Photograph of an artifact and wall texts

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The wall texts read:
“Like the hunter, I draw the beast to prepare myself for the hunt. Only then can I become the beast.
Hunters, they can kill.”

Photograph of an artifact and wall texts (partially visible)

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The image shows an artifact and wall texts. The wall texts on each wall are partially visible at the edge of the photograph. The full texts of each side wall are available in the following files: See MS-3-35, PB Box 20, Folder 9, Items 34 and 35.

Photograph of an artifact and wall texts (partially visible)

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The image shows an artifact and wall texts. The wall texts on each wall are partially visible at the edge of the photograph. The full texts of each side wall are available in the following files: See MS-3-35, PB Box 20, Folder 9, Items 34 and 35.

Photograph of an identified man and an illustrated poem wall display

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The photograph shows cardboard mounted image of an unidentified man in a suit sitting on couch (left) and a copy of a poem with illustration displayed on a wall (right). The poem reads:
“my grandfather my grandfather did not go to war my grandfather had flat feet my grandfather settled in forward Saskatchewan my grandfather came west with some horses my grandfather sold insurance my grandfather is named earl my grandfather had wheat my grandfather lived with us for seven years my grandfather always had a nice garden my grandfather smoked amphora tobacco my grandfather likes the grand canyon my grandfather can not hear very well my grandfather has a lot of tools my grandfather and I don’t know each other very well my grandfather always been kind to me my grandfather is ninety-four I love my grandfather…(repeats)..”

Photograph of an unidentiied person

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The image shows an unidentified person on a television screen facing the camera.

Photograph of Anatomical Plate with note

File is a photograph of an engraving. Legend on recto states: "Early in the sixteenth century a Holland physician, Laurentius Phryesen (Phries, Friesen), residing in the German city of Colmar and later at Metz, wrote a popular book on medicine, Spiegel de Artzny, which was published at Strassburg in 1518. The work contains two anatomical illustrations, cut in wood, dated 1517, and supposedly made after the drawings of Waechtlin, a pupil of the Elder Holbein."

Photograph of artifacts display

Item is an unlabeled photograph of an exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The image shows two artifacts each in black and white on a wall shelf.

Photograph of Bill Owen, staff member at the W.K. Kellogg Library

File is a photograph of Bill Owen accompanied by his obituary. Obituary reads: OWEN, William Hampton (Bill) / Owen, William Hampton (Bill) - 59, Halifax, passed away peacefully at home i the early hours of April 5, 1998, after a long struggle with cancer. Born in Townsville, Australia, Bill was the only child of the late Gordon Hampton Owen and the late Ruth (Clarke) Owen. Bill had a rich and varied life that took many interesting turns. He graduated from Melbourne University with a B.Sc. in 1960 and M.Sc. in 1964, and from Sydney University with a PhD in reproductive physiology in 1969. That same year he came to Halifax on post-doctoral fellowship with the Fisheries Research Board. After two years, he was in search of a career change and drove tractor trailers for a year before setting off for travels in Central and South America. After he returned to Canada, he spent a years studying Grizzly bears in the Arctic, then in 1975 took an M.Sc. in medical parasitology at the London School of Tropical Medicine. Following this, he worked as a miner in Thompson, Man., and then on the log booms on the British Columbia coast. In 1980, he graduated from Dalhousie University with a master of library service, and settled down to being a reference librarian at the Kellogg Health Science Library for the next 17 years, until his early retirement in June 1997 due to ill health. He was an avid bird watcher, photographer, traveller and had a great love of poetry, music and nature. Bill was a tireless advocate of the rights of the East Timorese, and many other causes both local and global. He had a keen wit and a booming laugh, and lived his life with great honesty, integrity and generosity. Bill is mourned by his beloved wife, Audrey Louise Samson, and his cherished children, Phoebe Ruth and Max; stepmother, Mary Owen, and stepbrothers, Tom and David Biltoft, Melbourne; his "adopted family" the Annands: Betty, Wendy, Kirk and Chris; and his many, many friends and relations in Australia and Canada. Cremation has taken place. Bill will be remembered at a gathering at the hall of the Universalist Unitarian Church, 5500 Inglis St., at 1 p.m. on Monday, April 13. Memorial donations may be made to the food bank, Oxfam or East Timor Alert Network, 33659-5th Ave., Mission, B.C., V2V 1X1. Arrangements entrusted to Dignity Cremation Services, Halifax.

Photograph of buildings with a transparent overlay

Item is a photograph of an unidentified exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The photograph shows the exterior of buildings with a transparent overlay showing two men standing and the text in the middle reads: “assuming that what must change is only out there.”

Photograph of buildings with a transparent overlay

Item is a photograph of an unidentified exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The photograph shows the exterior of buildings with a transparent overlay showing two men standing and the text in the middle reads: “assuming that what must change is only out there.”

Photograph of buildings with a transparent overlay

Item is a photograph of an unidentified exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The photograph shows the exterior of buildings with a transparent overlay showing an article page with an image of watching a film; the article's title reads: “How to hide two thousand men?”

Photograph of buildings with a transparent overlay

Item is a photograph of an unidentified exhibition presented by Eyelevel Gallery. The photograph shows the exterior of buildings with a transparent overlay showing an article page with an image of watching a film; the article's title reads: “How to hide two thousand men?”

Photograph of Carol Smilie - Donor of the Carol Smilie Fund for Community Health Nursing Library Resources at the W.K. Kellogg Library

File is a photograph of Ann Barrett, Carol Smilie, and Patrick Ellis. Accompanying note states: A new collection fund has been established for the Kellogg Health Sciences Library to support research and teaching in the area of Community Health Nursing at Dalhousie University. / The fund was established on the reitrement of longtime library friend and patron, Dr. Carol Smilie. Dr. Smilie was an Associate Proferssor at Dalhousie University School of Nursing from 1982-2001, and Associate Director of Undergraduate Cirriculum and Planning for the School [from] 1999-2001. Dr. Smilie graduated with an MSc in Health Education from Dalhousie in 1980. Her practice of nursing was concentrated in the area of community health. While assuming presidential responsibilities in the national and provincial organizations of the Canadian Cancer Society and the Canadian Public Health Association and Directorship of the Nova Scotia Sociobehavioural Cancer Research Network, Dr. Smilie worked to enhance the understanding of and support for the preparation of nurses to work as partners in the building of healthy communities.
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