Wednesday, September 19, 2018

TOMORROW, Benjamin Chee Chee's work at the Art Gallery of Sudbury, Ontario


Bemahdezewin kuhya Muhgehwaywin


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"Friends" (Canada Geese,) © 1974 Benjamin Chee Chee Estate-


"MY WORKS ARE NOT INFLUENCED BY INVENTIONS OF MYTHOLOGY BUT HONOUR THE TOTEMS OF THE PRESENT"

"GAAWII ZHAAGNAASHII DBAAJMOOWINING NDA NDINZIINAN WA MZINBIIMAA. MAAMPII GO NONGO EYAAJIK GDOODEMNAANIK NDA MNAAJAAK MZINBIIGWAA"

BENJAMIN CHEE CHEE

MARCH 26. 1944
MARCH 14. 1977

/Inscription on the Benjamin Chee Chee's tombstone at Notre Dame Cemetery, Ottawa, Ontario/-

Opening September 20 at the Art Gallery of Sudbury, the visual art exhibition "Benjamin Chee Chee: Life and Legacy" will display paintings, as well as personal items and documents, from this nationally renowned artist.

The exhibition will be on display until November 18th, 2018.

Born on Temagami Reserve in Ontario in 1944. Benjamin Chee Chee largely taught himself to paint and draw. His father died when he was two months old and his mother was absent for most of his life. Benjamin spent his life looking for his mother hoping to be reunited with her. It is believed this life ambition fueled his desire to succeed as an artist. He met her in the last year of his life. Most of his later art involved a mother with her young.

Benjamin Chee Chee was a very unique Ojibway artist. Unlike other young Woodland artists he chose not to follow the style of the Woodland Art Movement founder Norval Morrisseau. He was an innovator that adopted a minimalistic graphics style and used elegant flowing lines against a white clean background to create powerful art. He was a master of the simple line.

Chee Chee's artistic career was very brief. In four short years he had risen to national prominence. Unfortunately, at the peak of his success as an artist, Benjamin Chee Chee committed suicide by hanging himself in an Ottawa jail cell. He was only 32.

"On March 11, 1977 Chee Chee delivered the 18 paintings he had promised his agent, a collection now known as "the Black Geese Portfolio". He then went to Jimmy's Restaurant on Bank Street, a tavern he frequented. Police were called to find a window had been broken and Chee Chee "boisterous and intoxicated." He was placed under arrest and secured at 6:50 P.M. in police cell no. 10, which was a bare cell for uncooperative prisoners. Mintues later Chee Chee was found hanging from the bars of his cell. He had hung himself with a noose fashioned from his shirt. He died in hospital three days later."

- excerpt from Chee Chee A Study of Aboriginal Suicide written by Al Evans, published by McGill-Queen's University Press 2004.





* The painting in this post: "Canada Geese", 24"x30", © 1974 Benjamin Chee Chee Estate /Private Collection/

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