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Manitoba Museum launches Indigenous language game
Manitoba Museum launches Indigenous language game

CTV News

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • CTV News

Manitoba Museum launches Indigenous language game

The Manitoba Museum has launched an Indigenous language game to support early learners of the Anishinaabe language. The interactive language game, Anishinaabemowin with Amik, is available on the museum's website and focuses on animal names that are native to Manitoba and found throughout the museum galleries. 'It's just basically to support learning and language revitalization of Anishinaabemowin, the Anishinaabe language,' said Tashina Houle-Gaywish, head of Indigenous programming and engagement at the Manitoba Museum. The game features memory and matching challenges and incorporates the Manitoba dialect of Anishinaabemowin. 'It's always been the museum's effort, especially in the last decade, to include indigenous languages in our galleries and exhibits. So, my team and I wanted to take it a step further and have indigenous languages on our website.' Houle-Gaywish said the game is primarily geared toward children, adding that it can be played anywhere online — and not exclusively on museum grounds. She said the game will be 'especially beneficial' for teachers to use in pre-visit programming, with upwards of 90,000 students attending the museum annually. 'We're slowly making little improvements, and eventually we're going to expand to more words and phrases and other Indigenous languages,' said Houle-Gaywish. Funding for the initiative was made possible through the TELUS Friendly Future Foundation.

Gallery: Hudson's Bay Company artifacts at the Manitoba Museum
Gallery: Hudson's Bay Company artifacts at the Manitoba Museum

Winnipeg Free Press

time12-06-2025

  • General
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Gallery: Hudson's Bay Company artifacts at the Manitoba Museum

In better times, the Hudson's Bay Company made significant cultural donations, including more than 20,000 artifacts to the Manitoba Museum. The most famous is the 16-metre replica of the Nonsuch, the ketch that sailed into Hudson Bay in 1668-69, commissioned by HBC to celebrate its tercentenary in 1970. The museum's collection also includes brass tokens used as currency in the fur trade, a Plains hide dress and birch-bark canoe, and an array of other Indigenous and colonial objects related to navigation, exploration, retail and trade. Amelia Fay, Curator of Anthropology and the HBC Museum Collection at the Manitoba Museum, shows paintings that would have been on display in stores. Here's a small selection of items included in the massive collection. Branded items that would have been sold in the stores. Branded items that would have been sold in the stores. Late 19th or early 20th century beaded wall pocket, unrecorded Anishinaabe artist. Early 20th century Siberian wall pocket made from sealskin, unrecorded artist. Desk calendar, reportedly left at Fort Chipewyan by Sir John Franklin. Very large items sit covered in an alcove of the the HBC collections lab. There are drawers full of HBC blankets and sashes. Late 19th century binoculars owned by George Simpson McTavish Jr. Early 20th century beaded bible bag, given to George Fowlie in York Factory, unrecorded artist A beam scale from 1838, likely used at York Factory. Late 19th century copper trade kettle, a popular trade good brought in by HBC. The collection includes many handmade items of clothing. A beaded Bandolier. 1970s HBC blanket coat with fur trim.

Immersive film at Manitoba Museum allows humans to hear like orcas
Immersive film at Manitoba Museum allows humans to hear like orcas

Winnipeg Free Press

time03-06-2025

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Immersive film at Manitoba Museum allows humans to hear like orcas

Manitoba Museum's latest exhibition invites visitors to dive deep into the waters of the Salish Sea and immerse themselves in the world of the endangered southern resident killer whales. The augmented-reality experience Critical Distance is a 15-minute animated film that launches its Canadian tour in Winnipeg for Ocean Week 2025, and will be showing at the Science Gallery until Aug. 31. The film, on tour with Nature Canada in association with the Alliance of Natural History Museums of Canada, makes a strong case for ocean conservation, says Scott Mullenix from Nature Canada. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS A group of participants watch Critical Distance via AR goggles at the Manitoba Museum. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS A group of participants watch Critical Distance via AR goggles at the Manitoba Museum. 'Some people get pretty emotional going through the experience. We want to take that emotion and engagement and turn it into something useful for the orca pod and the ocean that Nature Canada is trying to protect. We thought a great way to do that would be to have visitors understand the different roles they can play,' he says. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Adam May is co-creator of Critical Distance. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Adam May is co-creator of Critical Distance. The immersive short focuses on the J Pod, one of three pods in the acoustic clan who are residents of the waters. The audience follows eight-year-old orca Kiki and her family as they navigate the challenges thrown up by human activity. Sound is vital to the orca whales, who use echolocation to communicate, and sound pollution is threatening the pod's ability to hunt, bond and navigate. The term 'critical distance' refers to the point in space where direct sound, such as an orca's call, is equal in intensity to reverberant or background noise. Placed in the middle of the pod, viewers hear and see the clicks, whistles and calls the members of the pod use to communicate with each other. These vocalizations are typically effective across long distances in a natural ocean environment, but the orcas, who live beneath a busy shipping area, struggle to make themselves heard. 'Some people get pretty emotional going through the experience. We want to take that emotion and engagement and turn it into something useful.'–Scott Mullenix Human activity, especially from boats, ships and underwater construction, has introduced significant noise pollution into marine habitats. This background noise effectively reduces the critical distance, which means orcas have to be much closer to each other before their calls are distinguishable from the surrounding noise. Submerged underwater with Kiki, the contrast in the varying sounds different vessels make become obvious – paddle boats barely make a splash, but motorboats and trawlers jar the quiet, littering the water with their loud vibrations. Sounds are translated into visuals so the audience can see what the orcas hear; it's a simple but effective method to experience the world from an entirely different perspective. After the AR animation, visitors are invited to join the movement to protect Canada's ocean by connecting directly with ocean conservation experts through Nature Canada's Ask the Experts section. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Critical Distance participants are fully immersed in the orca's experience. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Critical Distance participants are fully immersed in the orca's experience. Visitors can ask whatever they want about orcas, threats to the Salish Sea or the ocean in general. Their questions will be sent to experts who include Adam Olsen, lead negotiator and member of Tsartlip First Nation; Julia Laforge, protected areas policy manager at Nature Canada; and Rebecca Brushett, marine planning and engagement co-ordinator at Ecology Action Centre, who will reply with answers. The hope is that the experience will encourage people to lobby for change to protect one of the country's most endangered marine mammals — at last count, there were fewer than 80 southern resident killer whales in the Salish Sea. AV KitchingReporter AV Kitching is an arts and life writer at the Free Press. She has been a journalist for more than two decades and has worked across three continents writing about people, travel, food, and fashion. Read more about AV. Every piece of reporting AV produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Manitoba Museum exhibit offers augmented reality experience with orcas
Manitoba Museum exhibit offers augmented reality experience with orcas

CTV News

time03-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CTV News

Manitoba Museum exhibit offers augmented reality experience with orcas

An audience takes part in 'Critical Distance' at the Manitoba Museum on June 3, 2025. (Ken Gabel/CTV News) The Manitoba Museum is launching a new exhibit that will provide visitors with an immersive experience into the world of orcas. On Tuesday, the museum opened 'Critical Distance'—an augmented reality (AR) experience that will teach Manitobans about a group of endangered orcas, known as the Southern Resident Killer Whales. During this exhibit, visitors are transported to the Salish Sea through AR technology. Audiences follow Kiki, a nine-year-old orca, and her family as they face the challenges of noise pollution and declining salmon stock. 'What this experience does is allow audiences to experience echolocation, which is how the orcas hunt and feed,' said Adam May, one of the creators of the exhibit. 'Through a mixed reality experience, they see the orcas as they see each other, so through sound waves effectively. As the experience progresses, you see how human impact is affecting them and how they can lose each other in an ocean full of sound.' The goal of the exhibit is to make a compelling case for ocean conservation, as there are only 73 Southern Resident Killer Whales left in the Salish Sea. May explained the experience is a combination of the real world and animation. 'That's a really unique thing that mixed reality can do; it can take us into worlds that we couldn't otherwise get to as a human,' he said. 'And we can get closer to these species and understand why they're so important for us to save.' 'Critical Distance' is on at the Manitoba Museum through the month of June from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekends. Those aged 10 and over are welcome.

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