Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Daphne Odjig, Whose Art Blended Ojibwa With Picasso And Van Gogh, Dies At 97

The Canadian Press, 03 Oct, 2016 12:16 PM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — An elder of Canadian aboriginal artists whose work appeared in galleries around the world has died.
     
    Daphne Odjig was born in northern Ontario and had been living in Kelowna, B.C., where she passed away Saturday at the age of 97, her son, Stan Somerville, confirms.
     
    Odjig, whose work blended the influences of Pablo Picasso and Vincent Van Gogh with the shapes of Ojibwa pictographs, played a prominent role in leading First Nations painters into the mainstream of Canadian art.
     
    She and her late husband opened the first Canadian gallery dedicated to First Nations art, which became a magnet for what came to be called ''the Indian Group of Seven.''
     
    Odjig received the Order of Canada, as well an eagle feather from the chief of the reserve on Manitoulin Island where she was born — an honour formerly given only to great hunters and warriors.
     
    Odjig had been living in a seniors' home for some time, friend Sheila Keighron says, but was continuing to sketch despite arthritis in her right arm.
     
    "They were just beautiful. I think that's what kept her going," Keighron said of the sketches.
     
    During the Second World War, Odjig worked in factories in Toronto where she discovered art galleries and libraries. Picasso's cubist work was a major influence, and Picasso himself later saw her work when it was exhibited at Expo 67.
     
    "I did a lot of pen and ink sketches, charcoal sketches of the reserves and of people at work. Then we moved to Winnipeg and that was a meeting place for artists from the East and the West. Everything sort of mushroomed," Odjig said in an interview in 2001 at the opening of a show of her works in Toronto.
     
    Odjig and her husband opened a gallery in Winnipeg, which became a magnet for other self-taught artists including Norval Morrisseau, Jackson Beardy, Carl Ray, Alex Janvier, Joseph Sanchez and Eddy Cobiness.
     
    The Winnipeg Art Gallery took notice, and in 1972 gave three of the artists a groundbreaking show.
     
    Odjig and her husband moved back to B.C. in the early 1970s, eventually moving to Penticton in the late 1990s to be closer to a hospital.
     
    In 2007 she was the winner of the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts. She was the subject of a solo exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada in 2009.
     
    Odjig is quoted in a book published in 2001, "Odjig: the art of Daphne Odjig, 1960-2000," stating that if her work has helped to open doors between aboriginals and the non-aboriginal community, then she is glad.
     
    "I am even more deeply pleased if it has helped to encourage the young people that have followed our generation to express their pride in our heritage more openly, more joyfully than I would have ever dared to think possible," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CPP Reform To Sting Economy, Jobs Over Short Term, But Help Beyond 2025

    CPP Reform To Sting Economy, Jobs Over Short Term, But Help Beyond 2025
    Ottawa reached a tentative agreement with provincial governments in June to eventually increase contributions and retirement benefits through the public plan.

    CPP Reform To Sting Economy, Jobs Over Short Term, But Help Beyond 2025

    Accused In Deaths Of Two Women Pleads Guilty At Start Of Trial

    Accused In Deaths Of Two Women Pleads Guilty At Start Of Trial
    Clayton Eichler's trial was to begin Monday on charges of first-degree murder in the deaths of Kelly Goforth and Richelle Bear.

    Accused In Deaths Of Two Women Pleads Guilty At Start Of Trial

    First Nations art installations unveiled at City Hall

    First Nations art installations unveiled at City Hall

    The City of Vancouver, in partnership with the three host First Nations, Musqueam, Squamish and T...

    First Nations art installations unveiled at City Hall

    B.C. Home Buyers, Sellers Get New Protections With Real Estate Superintendent

    B.C. Home Buyers, Sellers Get New Protections With Real Estate Superintendent
    Michael Noseworthy recently served in a similar role in Yukon, where he was also superintendent of insurance and the registrar of lotteries and medical practitioners.

    B.C. Home Buyers, Sellers Get New Protections With Real Estate Superintendent

    Traps Set For Unwanted Guest Grizzlies Off Northeastern Vancouver Island

    Traps Set For Unwanted Guest Grizzlies Off Northeastern Vancouver Island
    Grizzly bears have never been seen on Cormorant Island, off the northeast coast of Vancouver Island, so when two showed up in the area, residents were intrigued but firm the duo must go.

    Traps Set For Unwanted Guest Grizzlies Off Northeastern Vancouver Island

    'It Was A Complete Shock': Arcane Law Strips Unwitting Canadians Of Citizenship

    'It Was A Complete Shock': Arcane Law Strips Unwitting Canadians Of Citizenship
    A British Columbia woman is speaking out after discovering she's been ensnared by an obscure law that automatically revokes the citizenship of second-generation Canadians that were born abroad.

    'It Was A Complete Shock': Arcane Law Strips Unwitting Canadians Of Citizenship