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Faye HeavyShield

Faye HeavyShield (born 1953) is a Kainai First Nations sculptor and installation artist. She is known for her repetitive use of objects and writing to create large-scale, often minimal, site-specific installations.

Faye HeavyShield
HeavyShield giving an artist talk at the Eiteljorg Museum's 2009 Fellowship for Native American Fine Art
Born1953 (age 70–71)
NationalityKainai Nation, Canadian
EducationAlberta College of Art and Design, University of Calgary
Known forInstallation, sculpture
MovementCanadian feminist art, contemporary Indigenous art

Background edit

HeavyShield, the third youngest out of 12 siblings, grew up on the North End of the Blood Reserve 148 in Alberta, where her father managed a ranch. As a youth she attended Catholic school at St. Mary's Residential. Growing up on the Reserve she spoke Blackfoot and English and spent quite a bit of time with her grandmother who told her oral history of the Kainai, or Blood people, who are part of the Blackfoot Confederacy.

In 1980 HeavyShield enrolled in the Alberta College of Art and Design and later obtained her Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Calgary in 1986.[1][2][3]

In 2007 HeavyShield narrated and acted in "Legends of Kainai: Stories from the Blackfoot People of Southern Alberta" produced by the CBC.[1]

Art career edit

My art is a reflection of my environment and personal history as lived in the physical geography of southern Alberta with its prairie grass, river coulees, and wind and an upbringing in the Kainai community (with a childhood stint in the Catholic residential school system). The past, present and imagined make up the vocabulary used to realize my thoughts and ideas; responses and references to the body, land, language. – Faye HeavyShield[4]

Upon entering the Alberta College of Art she began to explore artistic styles finding herself drawn to working with her hands through sculpture and large-scale installations. Creating these works gave her a feeling of immersion in the materials and concepts behind the pieces.[1]

Sculptural installations edit

Many of HeavyShield's works are site-specific, such as body of land, first created in 2002. Hundreds of small paper conical tipi forms are placed sometimes solitary, in couples, or in groups, on a wall. The forms are in shades of red, pink, purple and brown. The colors are obtained from digital images of human skin, magnified, then printed on paper. body of land seeks to show the permanence of environments, community, language, and history.[1]

These works often display multiples, whether the forms in body of land, boats, small squares of cloth, or other delicate and often hand-created objects. The creation of these pieces leads to repetitive tasks, such as dying clothing – this repetitive process is one that HeavySheilds finds meditative and exploratory.[1]

Indigenous culture edit

Always a major source of inspiration, HeavyShield's life on the Blood reservation and Blackfoot ancestry flow constantly through her work. In 2004 she created kuto'iis ("blood"), which consists of hundreds of small knotted balls of cloth attached to a wall, painted in red ochre. Similar to body of land in its chaotic placement of the knots, each knot signifies a blood clot. The repetitive pattern and ritualized act of creating the knots have been described as a "re-collection of stories, the sounds of language and song, of home."[1]

From 2007 to 2008 HeavyShield studied Blood beadwork in the collections of the Canadian Museum of Civilization, the Royal Ontario Museum and the Glenbow Museum. Studying the museums classification systems of these objects, she noticed they were stored in rows of drawers or on shelves and often with only small catalog tags. During this study she also thought about the people (mainly women) who created the objects, people whom she and her family are related to genetically and historically. One piece that came from this study is hours (2007); a book, with no text, consisting of twelve bound pages of woven white seed beads.[1]

Christian symbolism edit

HeavyShield's Catholic education and the importance of Christianity on the Blood Reserve continues to appear in her work. Drawings and sculptures inspired by the wimples worn by the Grey Nuns appear in the mid-1990s with heart hoof horn as well as addresses of prayer in the installation piece now I lay me down, showing semi-abstract fonts placed on a wall reflecting Catholic rituals and prayers. now I lay me down was a part of her 1994 exhibit "Into the Garden of Angels" at The Power Plant in Toronto.[1][5]

Feminism edit

In the 1990s, HeavyShield was one of the forerunners in the Canadian feminist art movement. Numerous works during the decade reflected on femininity and womanhood. In 1993 she created sisters: a circle of six pairs of high heels with the toes pointed outward. The installation, representing HeavyShield and her five sisters, symbolizes the strength of women. Utilizing shoes again in 1994's she: a room full of women she brings together twelve pairs of women's and girls' shoes spray painted matte black. This piece is the first time that HeavyShield utilized her own words (eventually bringing her poetry into future work) with framed black and white panels over each pair of shoes, representing "everywoman".[1]

Landscape edit

Growing up in southern Alberta, HeavyShield lived near two rivers: the Oldman and the Belly. She used to play in the Oldman as a child with her siblings and in 2004 she began documenting the rivers with photographs, which she proceeded to create black and white photocopies of, titling it old man is a river.[1]

Through digital images, writing and drawing, my time spent with rivers – their influence on our bodies and our histories – has been recorded and re-played. And through travels, this engagement with the idea of place and its texture has come to be site-specific.[1]

The piece, shaped like a diamond, consists of one-half encaustic images of prairie grass and one-half a large digital print collage featuring inscriptions of her thoughts. This work was displayed in 2005 at the Alberta Biennial.[1]

In 2004 she created camouflage, an installation and performance piece that involved HeavyShield placing stones and twigs from the Oldman River, which feature photocopied images of the river and text from the Blackfoot dictionary on them, on the shore of the St. Croix River. Releasing them to the elements, three weeks later most of the pieces had scattered or been carried away by the tide. This piece was created on the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Samuel de Champlain at the site – representing "themes of transplantation and exchange."[1]

Exhibitions edit

Notable collections edit

Notable awards edit

  • Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art, 2009, Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art[1]

Further reading edit

  • HeavyShield, Faye. venus as torpedo. Dunlop Art Gallery Publications, 1996. ISBN 0-920085-88-1
  • Kyo Maclear and Kathryn Walter. Private Investigators: Undercover in Public Space. Banff Centre Press, 1999. ISBN 0-920159-61-3
  • Paul Chaat Smith. Faye HeavyShield: Blood. Southern Alberta Art Gallery, 2005. ISBN 1-894699-30-0

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lee-Ann Martin. Faye HeavyShield: In the Blood. Art Quantum, pp. 71–79. Eiteljorg Museum, 2009. ISBN 978-0-295-98996-9
  2. ^ . Other Selected Contemporary First Nations Artists. Canadian Art. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  3. ^ "Faye Heavyshield". Artist's Page. The National Gallery of Canada. 2010. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  4. ^ "Mentor in Residence: Faye HeavyShield". Mentor in Residence. Mentoring Artist's For Women's Art. 2005. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  5. ^ Arthur Renwick (1994). . Writing. Center for Contemporary Canadian Art. Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  6. ^ Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists. Seattle : University of Washington Press. 2019.
  7. ^ "The Art of Faye HeavyShield". www.gallerieswest.ca. Galleries West Magazine, 2022. 17 October 2022. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  8. ^ "Faye Heavyshield: Untitled". Artwork Page. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 10 March 2011.

External links edit

  • Robert Houle on Faye HeavyShield 29 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Faye HeavyShield: Strength of the Kainai" 13 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Mason Studio
  • "Faye HeavyShield's Calling Stones" Galleries West

faye, heavyshield, born, 1953, kainai, first, nations, sculptor, installation, artist, known, repetitive, objects, writing, create, large, scale, often, minimal, site, specific, installations, heavyshield, giving, artist, talk, eiteljorg, museum, 2009, fellows. Faye HeavyShield born 1953 is a Kainai First Nations sculptor and installation artist She is known for her repetitive use of objects and writing to create large scale often minimal site specific installations Faye HeavyShieldHeavyShield giving an artist talk at the Eiteljorg Museum s 2009 Fellowship for Native American Fine ArtBorn1953 age 70 71 Blood 148 Alberta CanadaNationalityKainai Nation CanadianEducationAlberta College of Art and Design University of CalgaryKnown forInstallation sculptureMovementCanadian feminist art contemporary Indigenous art Contents 1 Background 2 Art career 2 1 Sculptural installations 2 2 Indigenous culture 2 3 Christian symbolism 2 4 Feminism 2 5 Landscape 3 Exhibitions 4 Notable collections 5 Notable awards 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksBackground editHeavyShield the third youngest out of 12 siblings grew up on the North End of the Blood Reserve 148 in Alberta where her father managed a ranch As a youth she attended Catholic school at St Mary s Residential Growing up on the Reserve she spoke Blackfoot and English and spent quite a bit of time with her grandmother who told her oral history of the Kainai or Blood people who are part of the Blackfoot Confederacy In 1980 HeavyShield enrolled in the Alberta College of Art and Design and later obtained her Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Calgary in 1986 1 2 3 In 2007 HeavyShield narrated and acted in Legends of Kainai Stories from the Blackfoot People of Southern Alberta produced by the CBC 1 Art career editMy art is a reflection of my environment and personal history as lived in the physical geography of southern Alberta with its prairie grass river coulees and wind and an upbringing in the Kainai community with a childhood stint in the Catholic residential school system The past present and imagined make up the vocabulary used to realize my thoughts and ideas responses and references to the body land language Faye HeavyShield 4 Upon entering the Alberta College of Art she began to explore artistic styles finding herself drawn to working with her hands through sculpture and large scale installations Creating these works gave her a feeling of immersion in the materials and concepts behind the pieces 1 Sculptural installations edit Many of HeavyShield s works are site specific such as body of land first created in 2002 Hundreds of small paper conical tipi forms are placed sometimes solitary in couples or in groups on a wall The forms are in shades of red pink purple and brown The colors are obtained from digital images of human skin magnified then printed on paper body of land seeks to show the permanence of environments community language and history 1 These works often display multiples whether the forms in body of land boats small squares of cloth or other delicate and often hand created objects The creation of these pieces leads to repetitive tasks such as dying clothing this repetitive process is one that HeavySheilds finds meditative and exploratory 1 Indigenous culture edit Always a major source of inspiration HeavyShield s life on the Blood reservation and Blackfoot ancestry flow constantly through her work In 2004 she created kuto iis blood which consists of hundreds of small knotted balls of cloth attached to a wall painted in red ochre Similar to body of land in its chaotic placement of the knots each knot signifies a blood clot The repetitive pattern and ritualized act of creating the knots have been described as a re collection of stories the sounds of language and song of home 1 From 2007 to 2008 HeavyShield studied Blood beadwork in the collections of the Canadian Museum of Civilization the Royal Ontario Museum and the Glenbow Museum Studying the museums classification systems of these objects she noticed they were stored in rows of drawers or on shelves and often with only small catalog tags During this study she also thought about the people mainly women who created the objects people whom she and her family are related to genetically and historically One piece that came from this study is hours 2007 a book with no text consisting of twelve bound pages of woven white seed beads 1 Christian symbolism edit HeavyShield s Catholic education and the importance of Christianity on the Blood Reserve continues to appear in her work Drawings and sculptures inspired by the wimples worn by the Grey Nuns appear in the mid 1990s with heart hoof horn as well as addresses of prayer in the installation piece now I lay me down showing semi abstract fonts placed on a wall reflecting Catholic rituals and prayers now I lay me down was a part of her 1994 exhibit Into the Garden of Angels at The Power Plant in Toronto 1 5 Feminism edit In the 1990s HeavyShield was one of the forerunners in the Canadian feminist art movement Numerous works during the decade reflected on femininity and womanhood In 1993 she created sisters a circle of six pairs of high heels with the toes pointed outward The installation representing HeavyShield and her five sisters symbolizes the strength of women Utilizing shoes again in 1994 s she a room full of women she brings together twelve pairs of women s and girls shoes spray painted matte black This piece is the first time that HeavyShield utilized her own words eventually bringing her poetry into future work with framed black and white panels over each pair of shoes representing everywoman 1 Landscape edit Growing up in southern Alberta HeavyShield lived near two rivers the Oldman and the Belly She used to play in the Oldman as a child with her siblings and in 2004 she began documenting the rivers with photographs which she proceeded to create black and white photocopies of titling it old man is a river 1 Through digital images writing and drawing my time spent with rivers their influence on our bodies and our histories has been recorded and re played And through travels this engagement with the idea of place and its texture has come to be site specific 1 The piece shaped like a diamond consists of one half encaustic images of prairie grass and one half a large digital print collage featuring inscriptions of her thoughts This work was displayed in 2005 at the Alberta Biennial 1 In 2004 she created camouflage an installation and performance piece that involved HeavyShield placing stones and twigs from the Oldman River which feature photocopied images of the river and text from the Blackfoot dictionary on them on the shore of the St Croix River Releasing them to the elements three weeks later most of the pieces had scattered or been carried away by the tide This piece was created on the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Samuel de Champlain at the site representing themes of transplantation and exchange 1 Exhibitions editHearts of Our People Native Women Artists 2019 Minneapolis Institute of Art Minneapolis Minnesota United States 6 The Art of Faye Heavyshield 2022 40 year retrospective MacKenzie Art Gallery Regina 7 Notable collections editEiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art Heard Museum National Gallery of Canada 8 Notable awards editEiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art 2009 Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art 1 Further reading editHeavyShield Faye venus as torpedo Dunlop Art Gallery Publications 1996 ISBN 0 920085 88 1 Kyo Maclear and Kathryn Walter Private Investigators Undercover in Public Space Banff Centre Press 1999 ISBN 0 920159 61 3 Paul Chaat Smith Faye HeavyShield Blood Southern Alberta Art Gallery 2005 ISBN 1 894699 30 0References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lee Ann Martin Faye HeavyShield In the Blood Art Quantum pp 71 79 Eiteljorg Museum 2009 ISBN 978 0 295 98996 9 Faye Heavyshield b 1953 Other Selected Contemporary First Nations Artists Canadian Art Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Faye Heavyshield Artist s Page The National Gallery of Canada 2010 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Mentor in Residence Faye HeavyShield Mentor in Residence Mentoring Artist s For Women s Art 2005 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Arthur Renwick 1994 Faye HeavyShield Into the Garden of Angels Writing Center for Contemporary Canadian Art Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Hearts of Our People Native Women Artists Seattle University of Washington Press 2019 The Art of Faye HeavyShield www gallerieswest ca Galleries West Magazine 2022 17 October 2022 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Faye Heavyshield Untitled Artwork Page National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 10 March 2011 External links editRobert Houle on Faye HeavyShield Archived 29 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Faye HeavyShield Strength of the Kainai Archived 13 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Mason Studio Faye HeavyShield s Calling Stones Galleries West Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Faye HeavyShield amp oldid 1217119070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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