167 4th Avenue, Kamloops, BC250-374-2400
Childhood Imaginations
Of Kings and Queens
Acrylic
30x26
$31,500 Framed
Framed Of Kings and
Queens
Legend of Nanabush and the Ducks 1967
ink/mixed media
22x30
$16,850 Framed
The Orator
oil pastel
24.5x18
$12,960 Framed
Evening Breezes 1981
24x18
Awakening of Spring
col.pencil
9x8
$3600 Framed
Carvings of Time
6.75x5.75
$1940 Framed
Emotional Release graphite 13.5x11 $4990 Framed
Emotional Release
graphite
13.5x11
$4990 Framed
Roots of Time
col. pencil
7x5
$1575 Framed
Flying High
10x8.25
$4125 Framed
Journey
6x5
$1350 Framed
The Whisper at Twilight
coloured pencil
6x4.75
$1280 Framed
My Dog Nanabush
Awakening in the Forest 1981
24 X 18
Little Rascals col.pencil 6x4.75 $1280 Framed
Little Rascals
Our Dog Long John
8.5x7
$2680 Framed
Under her Guidance
10.25x8
$3690 Framed
A Surprise Discovery coloured Pencil 11x11 $4840 Framed
A Surprise Discovery
coloured Pencil
11x11
$4840 Framed
Thunderbird Woman 1973 34 X 27 silkscreen $3500 Framed
Western Wall
24x21
silkscreen
$1965 Framed
Day's End
21x17.5
$1850 Framed
Hide and Seek
21x18
$2150 Framed
Husking Corn
Piggy Back
Vision
Silkscreen
Daphne Odjig is one of Canada’s most celebrated and distinctive painters. Born in 1919 on Manitoulin Island in Ontario, she has received numerous accolades for her art including an appointment to the Order of Canada in 1986, an election to the Royal Canadian Academy of Art, and in 1998, a National Aboriginal Achievement Award. In 2002 Canada Post chose to feature “Genesis”, one of Daphne’s 1976 works in its holiday stamp collection.
Daphne is the recipient of honorary degrees conferred by the Laurentian University, University of Toronto, Nipissing University of North Bay and the Okanagan University College, and many other appointments and medals including the 2002 Commemorative Golden Jubilee Medal. In 2003 Daphne received an award from the Department of Canadian Heritage. In 2004 her life and work was commemorated in a Native Earth Performing Arts production, The Art Show, in Toronto. Her most coveted recognition came in the form of an eagle feather given to her by the chief of the Wikwemikong Reserve where she had grown up. Odjig’s work can be found in the collections of numerous public galleries including the Museum of Civilization, McMichael, Kamloops Art Gallery, National Gallery of Canada, Glenbow Foundation and Art Gallery of Ontario to name a few. Daphne and her husband, Chester, currently reside in Penticton. Daphne continues to serve as an inspiration and role model for young Native people.
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