Friday, December 18, 2009

The exhibition that ended institutionalized discrimination against First Nations art at the National Gallery of Canada

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- 1990's PERIOD
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"Thunderbird Shaman Teaching People", 69"x104",
© 1990 Norval Morrisseau /Click on image to Enlarge/
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"NORVAL MORRISSEAU - SHAMAN ARTIST"
- ~ the first solo exhibition featuring a First Nations artist in 126-year history of the National Gallery of Canada. Exhibition held in Ottawa, Ontario from February 3rd to April 30th, 2006.
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Despite being widely recognized as the father of contemporary aboriginal art and despite the pleas of some influential people, Norval Morrisseau did not become part of the National Gallery of Canada's collection until 2000 (click HERE & HERE to view the first two Norval Morrisseau acquisition by the National Gallery of Canada).

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As early as 1972, Selwyn Dewdney, an influential anthropologist and art enthusiast who befriended Morrisseau in northern Ontario early in his career, pressed the National Gallery of Canada to buy some of the artist's work. The gallery refused. "I made a pitch at the National Gallery for inclusion of your work in the permanent collection but encountered deaf ears, Dewdney wrote Morrisseau. "It appears that if you're of Amerindian origin the proper place for your art is a museum!"
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* The acrylic painting on canvas in this post: "Thunderbird Shaman Teaching People", 69"x104", © 1990 Norval Morrisseau

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