Mary K. Okheena

Mary K. Okheena in 1977, at Holman (Ulukhaktok)

Mary Kapbak Okheena (also goes by Memorana, Krappak, Kappak)[1] is an Inuvialuit[2] graphic artist[3] known for her stencil prints including "Musk-ox Waiting for the Tide to Cross Water" (1986) and "Shaman Dances to Northern Lights" (1991), drawings and embroidery.[4] She is part of the third generation of organized graphic artists in the Canadian Arctic.[5] Okheena has five children[6] with her husband Eddie[7] and she currently lives in Inuvik where she practices embroidery and makes wall hangings.[4]

Biography

Early life

Okheena was born in 1957 in Holman (Uluqsaqtuuq), King’s Bay, Victoria Island, Northwest Territories. Her father Jimmy Memorana was a sculptor and printmaker and helped found the Holman Island Eskimo Co-operative. Her mother, Nora Memorana, was an expert sewer.[7] Both Jimmy and Nora were respected drum dancers in their communities.[1] Okheena grew up watching her father and her aunt Agnes Nanogak Goose make prints for the Holman Print Shop (part of the Holman Island Eskimo Co-operative)[5] inspiring her career in printing

Career

Mary K. Okheena started drawing in her teens and at the age of nineteen.[7] In 1977 she sold her first drawing.[8] She was invited by Father Henri Tardy to help with stencil printing after she made a large embroidery design for his church.[3] Father Tardy, who introduced printmaking to Holman, taught Okheena how to make waxed-paper stencils.[6] She started printing in 1977 when John Rose, the Holman Print Shop manager, asked her to come and learn printmaking.[8] Okheena began her professional printing career by printing other artists’ images, which are included in annual Holman print collections from 1979 and 1980-1981.[9] In 1986, Okheena began printing her own works at the Holman Print Shop [5] after her prints were rejected by the Canadian Eskimo Council in 1984.[8] Between 1977 and 1982, Okheena intermittently worked at the Holman Print Shop during the birth and infancy of her eldest children.[3] Okheena worked for the Holman Print Shop longer than any artist currently working there.[1]

She eventually left the print shop partly because of health problems caused by printmaking chemicals and set up a home studio.[7] Okheena also spends her time crocheting, quilting, carving, making wall hangings, and sewing clothing for her family.[7]

Okheena has also illustrated John Bierhorst’s 1997 children’s book called The Dancing Fox: Arctic Folktales.[10]

Artwork

Print

Mary K. Okheena uses a specific stencil technique in her prints to achieve subtle and luminous gradations of colour. Okheena abstracts formal qualities of animal and human forms.[3] She is often inspired by children’s facial expressions,[4] and often uses culturally symbolic images in her work such as the inukshuk.[1] She has created her own form of storytelling,[3] by reflecting the dual traditions of Holman Inuvialuit families and those of the resident Copper Inuit (as seen in Shaman Dances to Northern Lights).[2] She combines an Inuit aesthetic with influence from Southern culture and uses Western artistic devices.[3] Over her career, over seventy of her prints have been made into prints, and thirty-six of her drawings she printed herself, as well as printing over 30 works from other artists’ designs.[4]

Exhibitions

In 1988, Mary K. Okheena was commissioned to create a print for the cover of the Northwest Territories Telephones’ telephone directory. Her work has been featured at galleries such as the Arctic Arts Gallery in Yellowknife, NWT (1989, 1990)[9] and the National Gallery of Canada. Museums and galleries that have her prints in their permanent collections include the Canadian Museum of Civilization, Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre in Yellowknife,[9] Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Winnipeg Art Gallery.

Resources

  1. 1 2 3 4 WAG, The Winnipeg Art Gallery, (2002-04-15). "Holman: 40 Years of Graphic Art -- An exploration of the graphic art of Holman, Northwest Territories, Canada". www.virtualmuseum.ca. Retrieved 2018-03-31.
  2. 1 2 Engelstad, Bernadette Driscoll (2009). Sanattiaqsimajut: These Things That Are Finely Made, "Shamanism in Ulukhaktok Graphic Art: Hidden Worlds, Ecstatic Displays". Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Carleton University Art Gallery. pp. 192–193.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Mary K. Okheena (b.1957)". contemporary arts americas tbc... 2014-11-18. Retrieved 2018-03-31.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Mary Okheena | NWT Arts". nwtarts.com. Retrieved 2018-03-31.
  5. 1 2 3 "Songs of Animals (1986) by Mary Okheena, Inuit artist (C40402)". Spirit Wrestler Gallery. Retrieved 2018-03-31.
  6. 1 2 Roy-Sole, Monique (March 2005). "Art in the Bones". Canadian Geographic.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Kelley, Caffyn (1991). Wild Things: The Wisdom of Animals. North Vancouver, B.C., Canada: Gallerie Publications. pp. 15–17. ISBN 0-9693361-4-4.
  8. 1 2 3 "Portrait of a New Inuit Artist: Mary Okheena". Northern Review 1.2. Winter 1988.
  9. 1 2 3 Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy (1995). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. United States of America: Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data. ISBN 0-8240-6049-0.
  10. The Dancing Fox: Arctic Folktales
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