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Overview"Part biography, part art history -- a thoroughly engaging look at one man's life and his phenomenal influence on the world of contemporary art. Bill Reid was at the forefront of the modern-day renaissance of Northwest Coast Native art; but his art, and his life, was not without controversy. Like the raven -- the trickster and principal figure in countless Haida myths -- Bill Reid reinvented himself several times over. Born to a partly Haida mother and a father of German and Scottish descent, his public persona as a Haida Indian seems to have been as much a product of journalists, art patrons, museum curators and others in the non-Native establishment as of Bill Reid himself. It is clear that Reid's art arose from the tension that existed between his Native and white artistic perceptions. Award-winning biographer and cultural historian Maria Tippett became intrigued by this enigmatic figure who referred to his own early works as ""artefakes,"" yet to this day continues to inspire new generations of Northwest Coast artists, including Robert Davidson and Jim Hart. But she questions whether Reid's status as the architect of contemporary Native art is fair and accurate, given that artists such as Mungo Martin had been keeping the tradition alive since the beginning of the twentieth century. Most controversially, she explores how Reid brought a sensibility formed through his white heritage to the reinvention of Native art. By asking difficult questions about Reid's life and work, and by analyzing the works of other Native artists since the beginning of the twentieth century, Tippet gives the reader the defining portrait of Bill Reid -- one of Canada's most enigmatic and beloved artists. Bill Reid's work can be found in private and public art galleries and museums all over the world. The Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia houses the famous The Raven and The First Men and many smaller masterworks. The Spirit of Haida Gwaii, a monumental bronze sculpture over four metres high, is on display at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. The British Museum, the Musée de l'Homme in Paris and the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa also hold impressive examples of the work of this extraordinary and imaginative artist. From the Hardcover edition." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Maria TippettPublisher: Random House USA Inc Imprint: Random House USA Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.386kg ISBN: 9780679311942ISBN 10: 0679311947 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 14 September 2004 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsIn Bill Reid: The Making of an Indian, Tippett presents considerable evidence that Reid spent much of his life perplexed by who he was, never at ease as an Indian, but never quite satisfied to be an urbane white man either.... We know, thanks to Tippett's dogged research for this book, that he did not single-handedly rescue Northwest coast art from oblivion. But what he did do was introduce the concept that native artists might command important commissions and consort with important patrons. <br>-- The Vancouver Sun; Times-Colonist (Victoria)<br><br> The book's great strength is Tippett's extensive archival research. She has found important family records, many of Reid's letters, and an early radio documentary.... All of us are therefore in her debt. <br>-- The National Post<br> <br> Tippett's writing is exceptionally crisp, and she keeps an academic's tight rein on the material, sticking with the facts of Reid's life. <br>-- Quill & Quire<br><br> There is enough inherent melodrama in is story to render his creative-cultural saga brutally sentimental, but Tippett wisely avoids this temptation. <br>-- Quill and Quire , Dec 2003<br><br> A scrupulously even-handed tight-wire act.... This is engaging, hard stuff, fairly asked and fairly considered. <br>-- Toronto Star In Bill Reid: The Making of an Indian, Tippett presents considerable evidence that Reid spent much of his life perplexed by who he was, never at ease as an Indian, but never quite satisfied to be an urbane white man either.... We know, thanks to Tippett's dogged research for this book, that he did not single-handedly rescue Northwest coast art from oblivion. But what he did do was introduce the concept that native artists might command important commissions and consort with important patrons. --The Vancouver Sun; Times-Colonist (Victoria) The book's great strength is Tippett's extensive archival research. She has found important family records, many of Reid's letters, and an early radio documentary.... All of us are therefore in her debt. --The National Post Tippett's writing is exceptionally crisp, and she keeps an academic's tight rein on the material, sticking with the facts of Reid's life. --Quill & Quire There is enough inherent melodrama in is story to render his creative-cultural saga brutally sentimental, but Tippett wisely avoids this temptation. --Quill and Quire, Dec 2003 A scrupulously even-handed tight-wire act.... This is engaging, hard stuff, fairly asked and fairly considered. --Toronto Star In Bill Reid: The Making of an Indian, Tippett presents considerable evidence that Reid spent much of his life perplexed by who he was, never at ease as an Indian, but never quite satisfied to be an urbane white man either.... We know, thanks to Tippett's dogged research for this book, that he did not single-handedly rescue Northwest coast art from oblivion. But what he did do was introduce the concept that native artists might command important commissions and consort with important patrons. <br>-- The Vancouver Sun; Times-Colonist (Victoria) <br> The book's great strength is Tippett's extensive archival research. She has found important family records, many of Reid's letters, and an early radio documentary.... All of us are therefore in her debt. <br>-- The National Post<br> <br> Tippett's writing is exceptionally crisp, and she keeps an academic's tight rein on the material, sticking with the facts of Reid's life. <br>-- Quill & Quire <br> There is enough inherent melodrama in is story to render his creative-cultural saga brutally sentimental, but Tippett wisely avoids this temptation. <br>-- Quill and Quire, Dec 2003 <br> A scrupulously even-handed tight-wire act.... This is engaging, hard stuff, fairly asked and fairly considered. <br>-- Toronto Star Author InformationDr. Maria Tippett is the author of many books on art, culture and history, most notably the Governor General's Award-winning Emily Carr: A Biography. Having spent ten years as a Senior Research Fellow at Cambridge University, Dr. Tippett now lives with her husband, historian Peter Clarke, in British Columbia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |