The Canadian Museum of Civilization is Canada's most visited museum.
Located in Gatineau, Quebec, just across the Ottawa River from Ottawa, the nation's
capital, the museum's current building opened on June 29, 1989, and has been proclaimed as an architectural landmark; however, it has also been criticized for the severe cost
overruns. The museum's focus is upon the history of Canada from
the era of the First Nations until the present. Notable features include
the massive First Nations Hall, the walk-through Canadian history, the Children's Museum, and the large IMAX-Omnimax movie
theater.
The recreation of a native Haida village is a spectacular sight, capturing the scene
of a Pacific coast village with massive totem poles, village buildings and a
North American rainforest backdrop. The backdrop is considered to be the largest print of a photograph, in the world.
The building housing the museum is a work of art itself. Designed by renouned aboriginal architect Douglas J. Cardinal, the building captures the undulating natural
shapes of the landscapes, and uses materials indigenous to the area.
The Museum of Civilization is run by the Museum of Civilization Corporation a government Crown corporation that also manages the Canadian War Museum and the Canadian Postal
Museum.
History
The museum was first founded as the as a display hall for the Geological Survey of Canada, which was accumulating not only minerals, but biological
specimens, and historical artifacts. Originally located in Montreal the museum was
moved to Ottawa in 1895. In 1911 it moved into the new Victoria Memorial Museum Building. In 1968 the
museum was split into the Museum of Nature and
the Museum of Man, but both remained in the same building. In 1982 Pierre Trudeau's government announced that the Museum of Man would be moved to
its own separate facility in Hull. In 1989 the museum moved in to the new facility and was
renamed the Museum of Civilization.
Directors
External links
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