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A Close Bond, 2008 coloured pencil on paper, 10¼" × 8¾" |
A Festive Time, 2003 coloured pencil on paper, 4¼" × 4¼" |
Butterfly and Girl on a Swing coloured pencil on paper, 10-3/8" × 8-7/8" |
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Corn Men, 2004 coloured pencil on paper, 7¼" × 6¼" |
Day of Discovery, 2003 coloured pencil on paper, 6" × 3½" |
Dream Walkers coloured pencil on paper, 5½ x 4-7/8" |
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Family Ties coloured pencil on paper, 7½" × 6½" |
Fancy Ladies coloured pencil on paper, 7" × 8½" |
Fido & Family in the Corn Patch, 2004 coloured pencil on paper, 12½" × 8-5/8" |
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Fido & I, 2005 coloured pencil on paper, 5¾" × 6¾" |
Flower Child, 2008 coloured pencil on paper, 10¼" × 9" |
Garden of Wonders, 2008 coloured pencil on paper, 8¾" × 10" |
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Guidance from an Elder, 2008 coloured pencil on paper, 10¼" × 8¾" |
In Our Flower Garden, 2006 coloured pencil on paper, 5" × 6" |
In Our Sunday Best, 2004 coloured pencil on paper, 7¾" × 5¾" |
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Keepers of the Forest coloured pencil on paper, 7¾" × 5¾" |
Playmates, 2005 coloured pencil on paper, 5¾" × 6¾" |
She Dwells in the Mountain Peaks, 2008 coloured pencil on paper, 9" × 10¼" |
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Stairway to Dreams, 2003 coloured pencil on paper, 4¾" × 7" |
Survival coloured pencil on paper, 7¾" × 5¾" |
Symphony, 2003 coloured pencil on paper, 4¾" × 7" |
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The Breathing Forest, 2007 coloured pencil on paper, 7" × 8½" |
The Brood, 1996 coloured pencil on paper, 11½" × 10½" |
The Muscisian, 2003 coloured pencil on paper, 7" × 4¾" |
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Visiting Dream Catcher, 2006 coloured pencil on paper, 5" × 6" |
See also: Daphne Odjig Paintings
See also: Daphne Odjig Limited Edition Prints
Daphne Odjig, R.C.A. Artist Biography
Gallery Gevik, 21-Oct-2008
Celebrated artist Daphne Odjig was born in 1919 on the Wikwemikong Reserve, ManitoulinIsland. Her heritage is composed of Odawa, Potawatomi and English roots, the Native aspects of which were revealed to Odjig as a child on sketching excursions with her grandfather, a stone-carver. He taught her the legends of her ancestors and the use of the curvilinear design for which she has become revered.
Odjig had painted for most of her life but it was in the 1960s that she began to exhibit a deliberately Native perspective in her work and, like her grandfather, felt compelled to try to instruct the young about their heritage. To do so, she began to focus her art-making upon the legends, joys and realities of aboriginal life, while simultaneously refining her signature style of vibrant colours, soft contours outlined in black, overlapping shapes and modernist, abstracted figuration.
Odjig became a founding member of the first Canadian Native-run printmaking operation, the Canadian Professional Native Artist Association, or the "Indian Group of Seven" as they were described in the 70s. By this time she was exhibiting her work several times a year and had already gained international exposure in the United States, Europe and Japan. Her numerous awards include honorary doctorates from Laurentian University and the University of Toronto, an appointment to The Order of Canada, election to the Royal Canadian Academy of Art and the 2007 Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts. In addition, she was presented with an Eagle Feather by Chief Wakageshig in 1978 on behalf of the Wikwemikong Reserve in recognition of her artistic accomplishments - an honour previously reserved for men to acknowledge prowess in hunt or war. Documentaries by the CBC, the National Film Board and Tokyo Television have been made about Odjig and she's completed commissions for Expo '70 in Japan, the Royal Ontario Museum, and the twenty-seven foot mural at the Museum of Civilizationentitled The Indian in Transition.

























