Coast Salish welcome Haida at opening of Bill Reid Gallery
07.05.2008 17:00
Arts
- Source: cbc.ca
Haida artist Bill Reid, shown carving a sculpture, wanted to preserve Haida artistic tradition. (Canadian Press)The opening of the Bill Reid Gallery in Vancouver Tuesday was a meeting of Northwest First Nations cultures. Bill Reid, the artist for whom the new gallery of Northwest Coast art is named, was Haida, but the gallery sits on the traditional territory of the Coast Salish people in downtown Vancouver. Members of the Wolf Clan of the Coast Salish people danced to welcome members of the Haida nation to traditional Salish territory at the opening ceremony. Then the Haida danced and sang in return. Reid had always feared that the artistic legacy of the Haida — one he termed "strange and obsessive and very great" — would die unnoticed. The gallery, which opens to the public on Saturday, is another step in assuring that all cultural traditions of the Northwest First Nations and the work of new artists will be preserved. The totem pole carved for the centre of the building is an example of how Haida art has been passed down through the generations. Carver Jim Hart studied with Reid in the early 1980s, just as Reid had studied with Hart's grandfather. "It's celebrating Bill's life, but it's also using my old grandfather Charles Edenshaw's influence," Hart told CBC News. "That's how Bill worked. He admired Charlie's work, so it has characteristics of both men in the pole, and that's paying respect to Bill but also to Charlie." The gallery was once the home of the Canadian Craft Museum and is also the home of the Chief Dan George Centre. Its existence is one of the legacies of the city's deal to allow developers to build taller buildings in exchange for providing cultural amenities. The gallery contains holographic images of Reid's larger works, such as the Spirit of Haida Gwaii — a war canoe filled with disparate creatures who are, nonetheless, all paddling in the same direction. The original sculpture is at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C., and it's also the image on the back of the Canadian $20 bill. Reid started as CBC broadcasterCo-curator Martine Reid, Bill Reid's widow, is responsible for the jewellery exhibit in one part of the gallery. She says jewellery-making helped Reid become a great carver in the Haida tradition. "He recognized the Haida well-made objects— that is, those that were deeply carved," Martine Reid told CBC News. "In Haida language, which has no general word for art, 'deeply carved' simply means well made. But deeply carved has deeper meaning. It affirms respect for the meanings invested in art, empowering them to be deeply carved into our consciousness." Before he became internationally known as a Haida artist, Bill Reid worked with CBC Radio and TV. He was a good storyteller, and there are close to 500 hours of video and audio material about and by him. The gallery is sifting through those tapes to find gems to include in the gallery exhibits. "Bill was a media personality before he was an artist, so he brought with him a lot of talents of expression," said George MacDonald, co-curator of the current exhibition at the gallery. "So it is a special way of presenting his marvellous works, because each one of his works has a story embedded in it, if not multiple stories, told in his own resonant voice." With files from Paul GrantPost a commentPeople have commented on this storyRecommend this storyPeople have recommended this storyStory Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACKStory comments (0)Sort:Most recent | First to last | Most recommendedPost your commentNote: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are pre-moderated/reviewed and published according to our submission guidelines. Comment:Characters allowed: 2500PostSubmission policyMore Art & Design HeadlinesMonet sells for record $41M in New York00A Claude Monet painting of a bridge with two trains passing over the Seine while pleasure boats float below was auctioned Tuesday in New York for more than $41 million, breaking the auction record for the French impressionist artist.War Museum, National Ballet School win GGs for architecture00The redesigned National Ballet School in Toronto and the new Canadian War Museum in Ottawa are among the 2008 winners of Governor General's Medals in Architecture.Coast Salish welcome Haida at opening of Bill Reid Gallery00The opening of the Bill Reid Gallery in Vancouver Tuesday was a meeting of Northwest First Nations cultures.Hazel cartoonist Ted Key dies at 9500Ted Key, who created the comic strip Hazel and the animated TV characters Mr. Peabody and Sherman, has died. He was 95.National Gallery gets endowment for art touring00One month after federal funding to support touring art exhibitions was cut, a group of patrons of the National Gallery of Canada have donated $650,000 toward a touring fund for the Ottawa gallery.More Arts HeadlinesCanadian sex educator Johanson ending TV call-in show00Canadian sex educator Sue Johanson is ending her six-season run on Sunday night's Talk Sex.Egoyan's Adoration picked up by Sony00Sony Pictures has picked up the distribution rights to Atom Egoyan's latest film, Adoration, starring Arsinee Khanjian and Scott Speedman. Furtado to be honorary fellow at Toronto's Royal Conservatory00Canadian singer Nelly Furtado will be given an honorary fellowship by the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto at its gala May 28.Dancap sues to block sale of Toronto theatres to Mirvish00Toronto theatre group Dancap Productions is suing Key Brand Entertainment and Ed Mirvish Enterprises, alleging they engaged in secret negotiations that led to the sale of two Toronto theatres. Ellen Page to go Gothic in Jane Eyre00Halifax-born actress Ellen Page is set to take on one of the most enduring fictional romances in British literature, Jane Eyre. Arts FeaturesThe reluctant entertainerThe journey of singer, rapper and Feist producer GonzalesDisc of the weekNeil Diamond's Home Before DarkThe mouth that roarsBritish author Martin Amis defends his new book on 9/11Another green worldA survey of Canadian environmental artInside Abu GhraibFilmmaker Errol Morris trains his lens on the infamous Iraqi prisonOld maidMade of Honor is a tired retread of better nuptial rom-comsPeople who read this also read …
|