Beau Dick
Revolutionary Spirit
- Publisher
- Figure 1 Publishing
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2018
- Category
- Native American, Canadian, General
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781773270401
- Publish Date
- Mar 2018
- List Price
- $40
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
A stunning tribute to the art and life of one of the greatest Indigenous carvers of the last fifty years
Born in 1955 on Village Island, Kingcome Inlet, British Columbia, Beau Dick was a Kwakwakawakw artist, activist and teacher. He lived and worked in Alert Bay. Although foremost an artist, Dick was actively engaged in all aspects of Kwakwaka'wakw culture: studying and revivifying the traditions of carving, dancing, and storytelling. From the age of fourteen Dick trained with his grandfather and father. His skills were further enhanced when he spent a period in Victoria working with his uncle, Henry Hunt. Dick later worked with many other artists, including Tony Hunt, Bill Reid, Robert Davidson and Doug Cranmer. He was part of a team of carvers working under the direction of Cranmer that recreated the Namgis Big House in Yalis. Dicks appreciation for Kwakwakawakw heritage inspired him to become involved in ceremony and the Hamatsa society of his nation and it has both imbued his work with the long traditions of Kwakwakawakw culture and embedded it within them. In 1986 Dick created a transformation mask for Expo '86 which now hangs in the Canadian Museum of History, in Gatineau, Quebec. Beau Dick presents eighty of the artists finest masks and contextualizes his work within the Kwakwakawakw tradition, while also showing how Dick incorporated contemporary Western influences. Dick's craftsmanship and artistry have been noted for being strongly influenced by traditional pieces and techniques, but are particularly unique for their incorporation of contemporary and Western influences as well. As noted by artist Roy Arden, many of Dicks designs reminds [me] of Japanese anime characters and commercial Halloween masks An influence from a European painting, or a Japanese Noh mask, are equally likely to inflect on one of his works. In 2012, Dick received the Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundations VIVA Award for Visual Arts. In 2014, Beau was Artist in Residence at University of British Columbia. He died in February 2017 at the age of 61.
About the author
Contributor Notes
Darrin Martens is the Gail and Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chief Curator at the Audain Art Museum in Whistler, British Columbia. He previously worked as the director of the Nisgaa Museum in Northern BC, and, prior to that, had a long stretch as the director-curator of the Burnaby Art Gallery. Through these positions, he has developed a reputation as a curator with a thoughtful approach to First Nations and historic Canadian art and the more complicated issues, such as repatriation, that surround presenting these objects.