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OverviewThe definitive retrospective of the incredible career of one of Mi'kma'ki's most prolific artists, featuring 70+ colour images as well as essays from curators, art historians, Mi'kmaw artists and scholars. ""Most of my subjects deal with family, searching, struggle, and strength... All these things are part of my art, and my art gives me strength for my continuing spiritual quest."" --Alan Syliboy Alan Syliboy's artistic output is immediately recognizable across Mi'kma'ki and especially in Nova Scotia. His vibrant colours, flowing lines, and luminous figures--moving across murals, books, albums, and gallery walls--have become part of the cultural landscape, beloved for the stories they carry and the ancestors they honour. Alan Syliboy: The Journey So Far presents more than seventy full-colour images, highlighting works from his 2024 Dalhousie Art Gallery retrospective along with additional imagery. It features essays by gallery curator Pamela Edmonds and Mi'kmaq artists and scholars Catherine Anne Martin, Diane Langevin, Michelle Sylliboy, Catherine Girard, and Aaron Prosper, plus an in-depth artist interview. This landmark volume fills a critical gap in Canadian art history, showing that Syliboy's practice is more than artmaking--it is the sustenance of memory, voice, and a distinctly Mi'kmaq way of seeing that moves across generations. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alan SyliboyPublisher: Nimbus Publishing Limited & Dalhousie Art Gallery Imprint: Nimbus Publishing Limited & Dalhousie Art Gallery ISBN: 9781774714584ISBN 10: 1774714582 Pages: 144 Publication Date: 12 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationArtist Alan Syliboy studied privately with Shirley Bear and attended the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, where twenty-five years later, he was invited to sit on the Board of Governors. Alan looks to the Indigenous Mi?kmaw petroglyph tradition for inspiration and develops his own artistic vocabulary out of those forms. He lives in Truro, Nova Scotia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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