NEW YORK - Norval Morrisseau, also known as Copper Thunderbird, one of Canada's most celebrated painters and an important influence in the development of North American indigenous art, died Tuesday in Toronto. He was thought to be 75, although his birth year has been listed as both 1931 and 1932.
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The cause was complications of Parkinson's disease, said the Assembly of First Nations, which represents Canadian Native tribes.
Mr. Morrisseau, an Ojibwa (also called Anishnaabe or Chippewa) shaman, was one of the first native painters to adopt modernist styles to convey traditional aboriginal imagery and to have a crossover career in contemporary art. His style, which became known as Woodland or Legend painting, evoked ancient etchings from birch-bark scrolls and often used X-ray-like motifs: skeletal elements and internal organs visible within the forms of animals and people, and black spirit lines emanating from them.
"Saturated with startling, often contrasting colors, such paintings appear to vibrate under the viewer's gaze," said the National Gallery of Canada, which organized a retrospective of Mr. Morrisseau's work in 2006, the first solo show for a native artist in the institution's history. It is on view in Lower Manhattan through Jan. 20 at the George Gustav Heye Center, part of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
Of a 2001 New York show of Mr. Morrisseau's drawings, made on sheets of paper towels while he was in jail in Canada in the late 1960s, Holland Cotter of The New York Times wrote: "The results aren't ingratiating or beautiful. Like visionary work in many cultures, they're aggressive, sometimes violent, as much about fearfulness as about transcendence."
Born Jean-Baptiste Norman Henry Morrisseau in northern Ontario, he was the eldest son in a family of seven and was brought up, according to tradition, by his maternal grandparents. His grandmother was Catholic and his grandfather, whom he described as his most important influence, was a shaman. Their discordant views formed the background for much of his early life and his development as a self-taught artist working between two worlds.
He was believed to have been given his native name in his teens, when he became seriously ill. He said his life was saved by a medicine woman who renamed him, calling him Copper Thunderbird; a thunderbird is a powerful symbol in Ojibwa folklore.
Mr. Morrisseau, who dropped out of school at a young age and lived much of his life in poverty even after becoming established, was known as a charismatic, often unpredictable figure in the art world. He frustrated dealers, sometimes calculating his paintings' worth not by their quality but by the square inch ($3.55 at one point, according to a gallery owner). He battled alcoholism his whole life, and at a low ebb in the 1980s, living on Vancouver's streets, was known to trade his work for liquor money.
But after the tremendous success of his first exhibition in Toronto in 1962, he was also often prolific and showed his work around the world. Marc Chagall, who met him in Paris when both artists were having exhibitions there, compared him to Picasso.
In his later years, as accolades piled up, his life became more orderly, and he continued to paint until 2002, when Parkinson's left him unable to do so. In 2005 he was elected to the Royal Society of Canada. He was also awarded honorary doctorates from McGill and McMaster universities and received the highest honor awarded by the Assembly of First Nations, the eagle feather.
"Why am I alive?" he said in a 1991 interview with The Toronto Star. "To heal you guys who're more screwed up than I am. How can I heal you? With color. These are the colors you dreamt about one night."
Summary
The summary of the articl is that he droprd out of school erley and lived most of his life living in poverty. Then after his tromendes sucsess in his first exibition in Toronto he was very sucsessful. He met with an artist from Paris and he and the other artist where compared to Picasso. At the bottom line of the articl is that if you work hard you could always become succsesful.
Qestions
1 Why do you think the lady called him the Copper Thunder bird?
2 Why do you think there is some comfusion about his year of birth?
3 Do you think he mad the wright move to drop out of school early?
Monday, October 20, 2008
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12 comments:
I really liked this artical but i did not think he should of droped out of school because he became a victum in poverty but i liked the wa he worked hard and became succsecful in art and had some great art pieces.
Fraser sopik
I agree with fraser but ya even though he droped out early and was in poverty but he had more time to become a amazing artist and it also could of shown him other animals because he was outside all the time and he could relate animals to the positions he was in
I think that it is sad that he had just died last year and i understand that he has had a very hard life living in proverty and dropping out of school, but that just means that if you put your mind to something you can accomplish it like how he became a famous native artists.
I think it was not good to drop out of school. but the artical was good. still even though he was in poverty he should get a education
I dont think it is good to drop out of school early because there is more stuff to learn aboutand he became a victom of provety.But he was very lucky to make such amazing art
I think he should not have dropped out of school early because if he stayed, he would be able to get a job so he would not have to live in poverty.I think they called him the Copper Thunderbird because he was brave when he could have died.
I liked that artical. I don't think that he should of droped out of school because if he had stayed in school he probroly would of been more successful as a painter
I don't thinkhe should of dropped school because he could have go to art school and then spend time out side drawing animals. He could have done better drawings and paintings.
I like the name Copper Thunderbird
He shudent have stayd in School
This was an awsome article but, I don't think that he should have dropped out of school he could have been a greater painter if he had a backround a good education.
Beacause his famous painting is called Copper Thunder bird
I think because of droped out of school he became famous artist. Because he had more time than others. So I think that maked him better artist. And I agree with what he said.
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