Dr. DAPHNE
ODJIG
C.M., O.B.C., R.C.A., L.L.B.
Governor General’s
Laureate, Visual & Media Arts 2007
Daphne Odjig is a Canadian artist of Aboriginal ancestry. She
was born September 11,1919 and raised on the Wikwemikong Unceded
Indian Reserve on Manitoulin Island (Lake Huron), Ontario. Daphne
Odjig is the daughter of Dominic Odjig and Joyce Peachey. Her
father and her grandfather, Chief Jonas Odjig, were Potawatomi,
descended from the great chief Black Partridge. Her mother was
an English war bride. The Odjig family was among the Potawatomi
who migrated north and settled in Wikwemikong after the War of
1812. The Potawatomi (Keepers of the Fire) were members with the
Ojibwa and Odawa, of the Three Fires Confederacy of the Great Lakes.
Daphne
now lives and works in Penticton, British Columbia, Canada.
Art Media:
Oils, Acrylics, Silkscreen Prints, Murals, Pen and Ink, Pastels,
Watercolours, Coloured Pencils
Recent and Upcoming
Exhibitions:
Daphne Odjig: Four Decades of Prints
Touring exhibition of limited edition prints organized by the Kamloops
Art Gallery
-
Kamloops Art Gallery, Kamloops BC, June 8 – Aug 31, 2005
-
Winnipeg Art Gallery,
Winnipeg MN, April 22 – July 16, 2006
-
Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa
January 18 – April 20, 2008
The Drawings and Paintings of Daphne Odjig: A
Retrospective Exhibition
Touring exhibition organized by Art Gallery of Sudbury and National
Gallery of Canada
-
Art Gallery of Sudbury, Sudbury ON September 15 – November
11, 2007
-
Kamloops Art Gallery, Kamloops BC June
8 – August 31, 2008
-
McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinberg
ON Oct. 4 , 2008 – Jan 4, 2009
-
Institute of American Indian Arts
Museum, Santa Fe NM, June 26 – Sept. 20, 2009
-
National Gallery
of Canada, Ottawa October 23, 2009 – January 3, 2010
-
McKenzie
Art Gallery, Regina SK, February 6 – May 15, 2010
Exhibitions organized by private galleries:
- Gallery Phillip, Toronto ON 20.10.07 (retrospective prints & paintings)
www.gevik.com
-
Hampton Gallery, Kamloops BC 08.06.08
(new drawings) www.hamptongalleries.com
-
Hambleton Gallery, Kelowna
BC 21.03 – 06.04.09 (early works & new
drawings) www.hambletongalleries.com
ReferenceThe Drawings and Paintings of Daphne
Odjig: A Retrospective Exhibition by Bonnie Devine. Published
by the National Gallery of Canada in collaboration with the Art
Gallery of Sudbury, 2007. For full list of exhibitions prior
to 2007, please see p.p. 133-136. For list of works in major
Collections, see p. 142. For Selected Bibliography, see p.
143. For Chronology of Daphne Odjig’s life up to 2007, please
see excerpt from p.p. 137 – 141 (attachment #1 to curriculum
vitae).
Awards, Honours and Credits:
Visual Arts:
1963 Member of the British Columbia Federation of Artists
1971 Arts Grant for tour and exhibition of Paintings at the Smotra
Folklore Festival, Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
1973 Swedish Brucebo Foundation Scolarship and resident Artist
at the Foundation Studio, Visby, Island of Gotland, Sweden
1973 Manitoba Arts Council Bursary
1989 Elected Member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Art ( R.C.A.)
1993 Presented Eagle Feather by SCANA (Society of Canadian Artists
of Native Ancestry) at the 5th National Native Symposium, Halifax
NS
2002 Canada Post – Genesis Christmas Stamp
2007 Governor
General’s Laureate, Visual & Media
Arts. This award is Canada’s highest honour in the field of Visual
Arts.
Academia:
1982 Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, conferred
by Laurentian University, Sudbury ON
1985 Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, conferred by the
University of Toronto, Toronto ON
1993 Doctor of Education, honoris causa, conferred by
Nipissing University, North Bay, ON
2002 Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, conferred by
Okanagan University College, Kelowna, BC,
08.06.02
2007 Doctor of Letters, honoris causa conferred by Thompson
Rivers University, Kamloops, BC (8.06.07)
2008 Doctor of Fine Arts, honoris causa conferred by
The Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto (23.05.08)
2008 Doctor of Laws, honoris causa conferred by the University
of Western Ontario, London Ontario (12.06.08)
Leadership
and Service:
1977 Canada Silver Jubilee Medal
1978 Presented Eagle Feather by Chief Wakageshig on behalf
of the Wikwemikong Unceded IndianReserve in recognition of Artistic
Accomplishment, an honour previously reserved for men to acknowledge
prowess in hunting or war.
1986 Appointed to the Order of Canada,
C.M.
1988–93 Honorary Board Member of the Canada Heritage Foundation
1992 Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation
of Canada
1993 Presented Certificate of Honour by the En’Owkin Centre and Canada’s
Drug Strategy Program, Penticton, BC
1996 Honorary Patron of the Ojibway Cultural Foundation capital
campaign, West Bay, ON
1998 National Aboriginal Achievement Award, Toronto, Ontario
2002 Queen Elizabeth II - Commemorative Golden Jubilee Medal
2003 Expression Award – National
Film Board of Canada
in recognition of work that champions Canadian cultural
diversity.
2004 The Art Show , a play about Daphne Odjig’s life
and art by Alanis King, produced by Native Earth Performing Arts, premiers
inToronto, ON
2007 Catalogue forThe Drawings and Paintings of Daphne Odjig:
A Retrospective Exhibition published in Ojibwe as well as
English and French, the first time the National Gallery
of Canada has published a catalogue in a First Nations language.
2007 Appointed to the Order of British Columbia, Victoria BC
(14.06.07)
2007 Crowfoot Mountain Expedition organized in Odjig’s honour
(29.07.07)
2008 Lifetime Achievement Award, Okanagan Arts Awards (15.02.08)
2008 Honourary Fellowship, Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
of Canada. Calgary AB (26.06.08)
Related Professional
Activities:
1970 Odjig Indian Prints of Canada Ltd: Founder, President
1971 Arts Instructor at Manitou Arts Foundation, Schreiber Island,
Ontario
1973 Co-Founder of Professional Native Indian Artists Inc.
(often referred to as the “Indian Group of Seven” Daphne Odjig,
Norval Morriseau, Alex Janvier, Joseph Sanchez, Jackson Beardy,
Eddie Cobiness and Carl Ray)
1974 New Warehouse Gallery, Winnipeg, Manitoba. Owner and
manager.
1986 Board Member, Canadian Native Arts Foundation (established
by John Kim Bell)
1993 Keynote Speaker, The B.C. Art Teachers’37th Annual Conference,
“Art Reflecting Cultures”, Kelowna BC
1993 Lansdowne Scholar & Discourse, “Arts in Education” The
Lansdowne Lectures, University of Victoria, BC
1993 Opened Retrospective Exhibition of the late Jackson Beardy:
“Jackson Beardy, A Life’s Work”, Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg
MN
1995 Advisory Committee Member, Canadian National Committee for
Jerusalem 3000
1995 Juror , visual arts collection, Indian and Northern Affairs
Canada, Ottawa,ON
1996 Juror , Canadian Native Arts Foundation (grants & scholarships).
Toronto ON
1996 Guest Speaker, 20th Anniversary Celebration, Thunder Bay
Art Gallery, ON
1997 Juror, Okanagan Mainline Regional Council, Kelowna BC
1998 Guest Speaker, Graduation Ceremony Wasse Abin H. S., Wikwemikong,
ON
Films and Documentaries:
1973 Colours
of Pride, National
Film Board of Canada
1976 Three Artists, Three Styles, Henning Jacobson
Productions
1981 Spirits Speaking Through, Spectrum CBC Canada
1989 Window on Canada: Daphne Odjig/Painter, Tokyo Television
1998 National Aboriginal Achievement Awards, CBC
2003 Xpression Awards, National Film Board of Canada
2003 The Life and Work of the Woodland Artists, First
Voice Multimedia Inc.
Executive Producer, Dr. Raoul McKay
2008 The Life and Work of Daphne Odjig , First Voice
Multimedia Inc.
Executive Producer, Dr. Raoul McKay
2008 Lunch With Daphne Odjig on Crowfoot Mountain,
First Voice Multimedia Inc.
Executive Producer, Dr. Raoul McKay
Chronology of Daphne Odjig’s
life:
Attachment #1
Excerpt p.p. 137 – 141
The Drawings and Paintings of Daphne Odjig: A Retrospective Exhibition by
Bonnie Devine Published by the National Gallery of Canada in collaboration
with the Art Gallery of Sudbury, 2007
1919 Born 11 September at Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve, Manitoulin
Island, Ontario, the first of four children, to Dominic Odjig
and his English war bride Joyce Peachy. Odjig’s widowed grandfather,
Jonas Odjig, lives with the family in the house he had built
a generation earlier and which still stands in Wikwemikong today.
The family is industrious and relatively prosperous by reserve
standards. Jonas Odjig is a carver of monuments and tombstones;
Dominic is the village constable. The family also farms their land,
raises cows, pigs, and chickens and owns a team of horses.
1925 Begins school at Jesuit Mission in Wikwemikong.
An avid student, she turns the family’s pig house into a play school where
she teaches local children to read and count. When they tire of her instruction
she converts the play school into a play church and hears their
confessions.
The family is musical. Daphne plays the guitar; Dominic the violin.
They all enjoy sing-a-longs and music nights listening to a hand-cranked
phonograph. She develops a life-long love of opera singing.
She is athletic and participates in the annual fall fairs at Manitowaning,
the nearest off-reserve town, eight miles away, taking prizes in
running and public speaking. Art is her favourite subject and she
develops the habit of sketching with her grandfather and father,
both of whom are artistic. She also helps her mother with needlework
designs for the church linens.
1932 Contracts rheumatic fever. Her formal education
ends following grade seven. Confined to bed for six months and infirm for
the following three years.
1938 Mother and grandfather die
within weeks of each other.
Maternal grandmother removes the four
Odjig children to her home in Perry Sound, Ontario. Here Odjig
encounters systemic racism for the first time when she is refused
work because of her Native appearance and name. She and her siblings
adopt the surname Fisher. Her two brothers still go by that name.
1942 Moves to Toronto with her sister Winnifred (Winnie).
Works at the John Inglis Munitions, Planters Peanuts and Dr. Ballards
dog food factories.
Attends dances in the evening at the Palais Royale with Winnie.
Briefly considers a career as a flamenco dancer.
Frequents the gallery at the Eaton’s College Street store, the
Royal Ontario Museum and the Art Gallery of Toronto (now the Art
Gallery of Ontario) and “discovers” painting.
Over the next decade she teaches herself by trial and error to
paint.
1945 Moves to British Columbia to marry Paul Somerville,
a Mohawk/Metis Second World War veteran she met in Toronto. Becomes stepmother
to Paul’s eight-year-old son, David.
1946 The family moves to Coquitlam, British Columbia.
1948 Son Stanley Somerville is born.
Continues her art explorations, experimenting in oils on homemade
stretchers and recycled tent canvas. Influenced by Cornelius Krieghoff,
she paints naturalistic landscapes.
1950 Discovers Picasso.
Dissatisfied with the confines of Realism, begins experimenting
with Cubism and Abstract Expressionism, carefully analyzing and
copying Picasso’s style and the techniques of American and European
Modernists in books and magazines.
1955 Family moves to Lindell Beach on Cultus Lake, British Columbia.
1958 Family purchases thirty-acre farm at Columbia
Valley near Cultus Lake with a plan to grow strawberries.
1960 Paul Somerville dies of injuries sustained in a car accident just before
harvest of first test crop. Later this year she plants their acreage
as planned.
1961 Farm yields five and a half tons of strawberries in
the spring. She spends the summer tending the farm. In the winter she focuses
on painting.
Begins period of intense artistic experimentation. She learns by
copying works in books borrowed from the library and visits the
Vancouver Art Gallery to study painting techniques up close. Influenced
by the Impressionists, Daphne experiments with light effects, broken
brush strokes and Cloisonnism.
1962 Sister Winnie enters Theatre Queue (cat.
45) in a juried competition. On the strength of this painting Daphne is elected
a Member of the British Columbia Federation of Artists the following
year.
Marries Chester Beavon, a friend and co-worker of her late husband
Paul. Moves to the city of Port Coquitlam, British Columbia. Beavon
applies for work as a community development officer in northern
Manitoba.
1964 Attends the 4th
annual Wikwemikong Pow Wow. With sister-in-law Rosemary Peltier-Fisher,
she meets the elder ladies of the community, who recount the old
Nanabush tales. Rosemary suggests that Daphne paint the legends
to help the revival of the culture.
Hangs an exhibition of Native
art at the Wiki Pow Wow with Tom Peltier, which is seen by Prime
Minister Lester B. Pearson and later purchased in its entirety
by the Federal Department of Cultural Affairs.
Beavon is posted to Grand Rapids, Manitoba.
1966 Couple is assigned to Easterville, Northern Manitoba
a small community of Chemahawin Cree who were displaced when the dam at
Grand Rapids went into operation. Records their hardship and endurance
in a series of pen and ink drawings depicting the people and their day-to-day
activities.
Begins work on the legend paintings suggested by Rosemary Peltier.
Makes her first sale to Gary Scherbain, a visiting civil servant
who begins to sell her work out of his home in Winnipeg.
Introduced to the work of Norval Morrisseau. His strong formline
has an immediate but ultimately temporary influence on her calligraphic
line.
1967 First public solo exhibition. Organized by Susan
Ross at the Lakehead Art Centre in Thunder Bay, Ontario. Seventy-eight
drawings, pastels and acrylics.
1968 Commissioned by Dr. Herbert Schwarz to paint a series
of erotic illustrations for his book Tales From the Smokehouse (cats.
31 to 36).
Solo exhibition in Brandon, Manitoba sponsored by the Manitoba
Indian Brotherhood and mounted by Bernard Polly, an art instructor
at Brandon University.
Learns collage techniques from Polly and begins a series of mixed
media collages incorporating natural materials. A looser, expressionistic
style begins to emerge.
1970 Exhibits commissioned work Earth Mother (cat.
8) at Canadian Pavilion, Expo 70, Osaka, Japan.
Begins reproducing Easterville ink drawings. Establishes Odjig
Indian Prints of Canada.
1971 Learns how to scale-up drawings for transfer
to large murals from Bernard Polly. Creates mural, The Great Flood, at
Peguis High School, Peguis Reserve, Hodgson, Manitoba.
Opens a small craft store at 331 Donald Street in Winnipeg.
Distributes reproduction prints of the Easterville drawings in
unlimited editions to a growing market.
Tour and exhibition of her paintings at the Smotra Folklore Festival
in Yugoslavia. The paintings are lost en route.
Teaches at Manitou Art Foundation, Schreiber Island.
Nanabush Tales is published by Ginn and Company. The
ten-book series of children’s readers is dedicated to Rosemary
Peltier, who died before she could see them published.
On a visit to Wikwemikong she learns about her Potawatomi roots
and her ancestor Black Partridge from her Aunt Grace (cat. 3).
1972 Commissioned by the Manitoba Museum of Man and Nature, Winnipeg,
to create mural The Creation of the World in Commemoration of
the Manitoba Centennial.
1973 Co-founds Professional
Indian Artists Inc. (the Indian Group of Seven).
Awarded Swedish Brucebo Foundation Scholarship, travels as resident
artist to the Foundation Studio, Visby Island of Gotland, Sweden.
Awarded Manitoba Arts Council Bursary.
Commissioned by the Royal Ontario Museum to create From Mother
Earth Flows the River of Life for exhibition Canadian
Indian Art’74.
Documentary: Colours of Pride (National Film Board, Canada).
1974 Tales From the Smokehouse published.
Expands craft shop to establish New Warehouse Gallery, first Native-run
gallery in Canada.
Commissioned by Dr. William Taylor to produce the “biggest damned
painting you can do.”
1975 Travels to Israel at invitation of El Al (Israel Airlines)
to tour and paint her interpretation of Jerusalem. Produces The Jerusalem
Series of Paintings and Prints.
1976 Leaves Winnipeg for British Columbia. (Anglemont on
Lake Shuswap).
Sells New Warehouse Gallery to Gary Scherbain, it
is renamed Wah-sa Gallery.
Documentary: Three Artists, Three Styles, Spectrum, Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, Canada.
1977 Awarded Canadian Silver Jubilee Medal
1978 Attends first National Native Artists’ Conference
at the Ojibwe Cultural Centre on Manitoulin Island, Ontario.
Presented Eagle Feather by Chief Wakageshig on behalf of the Wikwemikong
Reserve, in recognition of artistic achievement, an honour previously
reserved for men to acknowledge prowess in the hunt or in war.
Completes The Indian in Transition, commissioned by Dr.
William Taylor for the National Museum of Man in 1974. Masterpiece
installed in the National Arts Centre, Ottawa on extended loan.
1979 Commissioned by the McMichael Canadian Collection,
Kleinburg, Ontario, for painting Rebirth of a Culture.
1981 Documentary: Spirits Speaking
Through, Spectrum, Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation.
1982 Doctor of Letters, honoris
causa, conferred by Laurentian
University, Sudbury Ontario.
1983 Second National Native Artists’
Conference held at K’san, British Columbia.
Learns monoprintmaking technique from Joseph Sanchez (original
member of the Indian Group of Seven) during a visit to Arizona.
1984 Commissioned by Laurentian University
Museum and Art Centre, Sudbury, Ontario for painting Spiritual
Renewal.
1985 First Retrospective Exhibition, Thunder Bay National
Exhibition Centre and Centre for Indian Art.
Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, conferred by University
of Toronto, Ontario
1986 Commissioned by Glenview Corporation, Ottawa,
Ontario for works Tomorrow
Will Hold Our Past and We Dance Through Time.
Selected as one of four international artists to paint an homage
to Pablo Picasso for the Picasso Museum in Antibes, France.
Appointed to the Order of Canada C.M.
1988-93 Honourary Board Member of the
Canadian Heritage Foundation.
1989 Elected Member of the Royal
Canadian Academy of Art (R.C.A.)
Documentary: Window on Canada, Daphne Odjig /Painter Tokyo
Television, Japan.
1992 Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation
of Canada.
A Paintbrush In My Hand, Daphne Odjig published by Natural
Heritage/Natural History Inc.
1993 Presented Eagle Feather by SCANA (Society of Canadian Artists of
Native Ancestry) at the National Native Symposium, Halifax, Nova
Scotia.
1994 Presented Certificate of Honour
by the En’Owkin Centre (Penticton, British Columbia) and Canada’s
Drug Strategy Program.
1996 Doctor of Education, honoris causa, conferred
by Nipissing University, North Bay, Ontario.
Honourary Patron of the Ojibway Cultural Foundation Capital Campaign,
West Bay, Ontario.
Included in Kamloops Art Gallery’s limited edition print portfolio, Collecting
Canadian Art.
1998 National Aboriginal Achievement
Award, Toronto, Ontario.
1999 Moves with Chester Beavon from the Shuswap
to Penticton, British Columbia.
2001 Odjig: The Art of Daphne Odjig published
by Key Porter Books Ltd. Toronto ON
Published limited edition prints of And Some watched the Sunset,
Ted Haworth, printer.
2002 Doctor of Letters, conferred by Okanagan University
College, Kelowna, British Columbia.
Receives Commemorative Golden Jubilee Medal (Queen Elizabeth II
)
Genesis, Canadian Christmas Stamp
2003 Receives Xpression Award, initiative
of the National Film Board of Canada, Ottawa, for championing cultural
diversity.
Documentary: Life and Work of Woodland Artists. First
Voice Multimedia Inc.
2004 The Art Show a play about
her life and art by Alanis King, produced by Native Earth Performing
Arts, premiers in Toronto ON
Published limited edition prints of In Tune With the Infinite, Steve
Mennie, printer Salmon Arm BC
2005 Forty Years of Prints, exhibition
of her limited edition prints, Kamloops Art Gallery, Kamloops BC
2007 Receives Governor General’s Award
in Visual and Media Arts
Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, conferred by Thompson
Rivers University, Kamloops BC
Appointed to the Order of British Columbia.
The Drawings and Paintings of Daphne Odjig, A retrospective
Exhibition, organized
by the Art Gallery of Sudbury and the National Gallery of Canada |