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Sea of Islands
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*Winner of the 2026 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia*Sea of Islands brings together knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific with...
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03 June 2025

*Winner of the 2026 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia*
Sea of Islands brings together knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific with Western scholars working with Pacific collections—as well as members of diasporic Oceanic communities—to share the stories and journeys of the objects that comprise Canada’s largest Oceanic collection, housed at The Museum of Anthropology at UBC.
The Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia holds some 3,500 objects from Oceania, making it the largest and most diverse collection from this region in Canada. From regalia and jewellery to barkcloths and woven mats to carvings and canoes, all these items have travelled, sometimes circuitously, from their homelands—including Aotearoa, Australia, the Torres Strait Islands, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Rapa Nui, the Marquesas Islands, and Vanuatu—to the west coast of Canada. Sea of Islands traces the journeys and stories of these holdings, as shared by knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific.
Presented alongside more than 250 photographs of individual objects contextualized by historic and contemporary images from Oceanic communities, Carol E. Mayer’s text draws on her decades of research and outreach centred around the complex intersections between museum collections, contemporary art practices, and different knowledge systems. The result is a lively and accessible exploration of how these objects—old and new—continue to articulate systems of meaning and engender new relationships.
Sea of Islands brings together knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific with Western scholars working with Pacific collections—as well as members of diasporic Oceanic communities—to share the stories and journeys of the objects that comprise Canada’s largest Oceanic collection, housed at The Museum of Anthropology at UBC.
The Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia holds some 3,500 objects from Oceania, making it the largest and most diverse collection from this region in Canada. From regalia and jewellery to barkcloths and woven mats to carvings and canoes, all these items have travelled, sometimes circuitously, from their homelands—including Aotearoa, Australia, the Torres Strait Islands, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Rapa Nui, the Marquesas Islands, and Vanuatu—to the west coast of Canada. Sea of Islands traces the journeys and stories of these holdings, as shared by knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific.
Presented alongside more than 250 photographs of individual objects contextualized by historic and contemporary images from Oceanic communities, Carol E. Mayer’s text draws on her decades of research and outreach centred around the complex intersections between museum collections, contemporary art practices, and different knowledge systems. The result is a lively and accessible exploration of how these objects—old and new—continue to articulate systems of meaning and engender new relationships.
Price: $50.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Figure 1 Publishing
Imprint: Figure 1 Publishing
Series: Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia
Publication Date:
03 June 2025
Trim Size: 11.00 X 9.00 in
ISBN: 9781773271552
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
ART / Australian & Oceanian, Exhibition catalogues & specific collections, ART / Collections, Catalogs, Exhibitions / Permanent Collections, ART / Museum Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / Australian & Oceanian Studies, HISTORY / Oceania, TRAVEL / Australia & Oceania, ART / Canadian, History of art, Museology & heritage studies, Ethnic studies
“This book is a wonderfully collaborative study that explores how this vast collection at MOA has evolved, and draws focus to the many stories contained within.”
—Dr. Susan E. Parker, UBC University Librarian, citation for 2026 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia
“By foregrounding Indigenous voices and lived relationships, the book demonstrates how collections can bring together the past, present, and future. The voyage traced in Sea of Islands does not lead backward into a closed past, but forward—toward renewed relationships, shared responsibilities, and futures still in the making.”
—Roberta Colombo Dougoud, Pacific Arts: The Journal of the Pacific Arts Association
“[T]he book is a rich and diverse guide to the objects collected and held in stewardship in the MOA, but also makes connections to the contemporary work of Pacific artists. It is an inspiration for all museums with Oceania collections.”
—Oceanic Art Society Journal
“Sea of Islands is a wonderful, thought-provoking book. The UBC Museum of Anthropology is known for its Northwest Coast collection, but Carol Mayer invites us to raise our eyes to a more distant horizon. She asks us to look at and think about the cultural record of the wider Pacific, that vast ocean dotted with islands.”
—Robin Fisher, The British Columbia Review
—Dr. Susan E. Parker, UBC University Librarian, citation for 2026 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia
“By foregrounding Indigenous voices and lived relationships, the book demonstrates how collections can bring together the past, present, and future. The voyage traced in Sea of Islands does not lead backward into a closed past, but forward—toward renewed relationships, shared responsibilities, and futures still in the making.”
—Roberta Colombo Dougoud, Pacific Arts: The Journal of the Pacific Arts Association
“[T]he book is a rich and diverse guide to the objects collected and held in stewardship in the MOA, but also makes connections to the contemporary work of Pacific artists. It is an inspiration for all museums with Oceania collections.”
—Oceanic Art Society Journal
“Sea of Islands is a wonderful, thought-provoking book. The UBC Museum of Anthropology is known for its Northwest Coast collection, but Carol Mayer invites us to raise our eyes to a more distant horizon. She asks us to look at and think about the cultural record of the wider Pacific, that vast ocean dotted with islands.”
—Robin Fisher, The British Columbia Review
Foreword by Ralph Regenvanu
Preface by Susan Rowley
Introduction
Frank Burnett
Navigation
Barkcloth
Vanuata
Fiji
Solomon Islands
Papua New Guinea
Australia and Torres Strait Islands
Torres Strait—Erub (Darnley) Island
Aotearoa (New Zealand)
Samoa
Rapa Nui
The Marquesas Islands
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Notes
Photo and Image Credits
Index
Preface by Susan Rowley
Introduction
Frank Burnett
Navigation
Barkcloth
Vanuata
Fiji
Solomon Islands
Papua New Guinea
Australia and Torres Strait Islands
Torres Strait—Erub (Darnley) Island
Aotearoa (New Zealand)
Samoa
Rapa Nui
The Marquesas Islands
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Notes
Photo and Image Credits
Index