Yukon Art Exhibition Opens at Inuit Art Gallery (Feb 18 – Mar11)

admin | Saturday, February 13th, 2010 | No Comments »

The Inuit Gallery of Vancouver is presenting an exhibition of Yukon First Nations art from Feb 18th – March 11th.

New Traditions: Yukon First Nations  will feature traditional and contemporary art from 13 artists from across Yukon.

Opening Reception:  February 18th, 1-3pm  Artists will be in attendance.

New Traditions: Yukon First Nations resonates with history and proud tradition.  The twelve artists included in the exhibition, hosted by the Inuit Gallery, Vancouver, BC, represent all regions of the Yukon. Their love and respect for material, process, colour, storytelling and image making comes together in a display that honours imagination, technical proficiency and the creative power that exists within the eight First Nations language groups that live throughout the territory.

In spite of the inevitability of other cultural influences, the artists’ work ensures the continuance of their visual culture and traditions within a contemporary context. The expertise they demonstrate through beadwork, carving, tufting, weaving or painting is intertwined with a deep understanding of the natural and spiritual realms that are an intrinsic part of First Nations life in the Yukon.

The work of Eugene Alfred, Ken Ingemund Anderson, Vernon Asp, Christine Peters and Dennis Shorty represents the wealth of traditional and contemporary carving that has become synonymous with Yukon First Nations.  Alongside their carved paddles, totems, rattles, and bowls are examples of the exquisite beadwork, moose hair tufting, button blankets and Raven’s Tail weaving created by Shirlee Frost, Twyla Wheeler, Nancy Hager, Bev Morris and Ann Smith.  The bountiful, quiet and resplendent beauty found in the many artworks that make up New Traditions is further enlivened by the images of ceremony and daily life as depicted by painter Jean Taylor. Taylor’s paintings are, in a sense, a visual chronicle of the history and tradition that underlies the artwork of her peers.

The integral stories of Yukon First Nations culture fit as comfortably within the artworks on display at the Inuit Gallery as they do in day-to-day life in Canada’s vast northern Yukon landscape.  The artists’ precise renditions of mythologies, ceremonies, regalia, and many facets of their daily lives are inspired by and linked to their relationship with the land and all it holds for them.  Their artwork is intrinsically married to stories that speak of the past, the present and a future filled with hope and promise.  In a time when global influences can be cause for the blurring of cultural edges, the artists’ regard for history rich with tradition ensures that their own culture will not be eroded.

Helen Sebelius

Leave a Reply