Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Carl Ray's Masterful Lines (Part I)

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/Drawing vs. Painting/

Carl Ray  (1943-1978)
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"Circle of Life", Ink Drawing on paper, © Carl Ray Estate
/Click on image to Enlarge/


 ... "Ray's career developed in the shadow of Morrisseau's. He worked as an apprentice to Morrisseau on the mural for the Indians of Canada Pavillion of Expo '67 in Montreal. By this time Ray had developed a style of, and preference for, scenic painting. He approached the pictographic rigour of Morrisseau's work with an illustrator's interest." ...

... "Ray's linear style is appealing in its lyric naturalism and spiritual expressiveness. Birds and animals are rendered in silhouettes of subtle detail, while internally the creatures are raging or changing in mysterious ways." ...

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"Circle of Life", Acrylic painting on canvas, © Carl Ray Estate
/Click on image to Enlarge/


SOURCE (text): NORVAL MORRISSEAU AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE IMAGE MAKERS by Elizabeth McLuhan and Tom Hill; ISBN: 0-458-97390-4, Art Gallery of Ontario, 1984 /Methuen Publications/





>>> Reference posts: -
- Recommended readings (Part XII)
/"Sacred Legends of the Sandy Lake Cree" by JAMES R. STEVENS/,

- Norval Morrisseau and EXPO '67 (Part I),
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Red Lake Woodland Arts Festival: A Tribute to Norval Morrisseau and the Woodland Artists in 2 DAYS!, - Great Anishinaabe/Woodland Artists (Part I) &
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Honouring Carl Ray (1943-1978).
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