- Daphne Odjig – Artist
Daphne Odjig is an internationally recognized Canadian First Nations artist providing prints, collectibles, images, fashion, glass and copyright approval for her works Daphne has received the Order of Canada, is a Governor General’s Laureate and has been featured at the Museum of Civilization
- Daphne Odjig - The Canadian Encyclopedia
Daphne Odjig, CM, OBC, visual artist (born 11 September 1919 on Wiikwemkoong Unceded Territory, Manitoulin Island, ON; died 1 October 2016 in Kelowna, BC) Odjig was a founding member of the 1970s artists’ alliance Professional Native Indian Artists Inc , also known as the Indian Group of Seven
- Daphne Odjig — Arts of Canada
Daphne Odjig was a revered visual artist whose international acclaim reflects the deep impact of her work Celebrated as the "grandmother of First Nations art," her contributions have profoundly shaped Canadian art and inspired countless individuals
- Daphne Odjig paintings and prints - Bearclaw Gallery
Daphne Odjig is one of the most respected and uniquely individualistic New Woodland artists working in Canada today Born in 1919 on the Wikwemikong Reserve on Manitoulin Island, she is a member of the Ojibwa tribe Odjig has developed a distinct style based on the beautifully abstracted human form
- Daphne Odjig - Wikipedia
Daphne Odjig, CM OBC RCA (September 11, 1919 – October 1, 2016), was a Canadian First Nations artist of Odawa - Potawatomi - English heritage Her paintings are often characterized as Woodlands Style or as the pictographic style
- Daphne Odjig - National Gallery of Canada
Daphne Odjig is one of Canada’s most celebrated Indigenous painters and printmakers Born on Manitoulin Island’s Wikwemikong reserve of Odawa, Potawatomi and English heritage, she first learned about art-making from her grandfather, Jonas Odjig, a tombstone carver who taught her to draw and paint
- Daphne Odjig - native artist member of the Indian Group of Seven
Daphne Odjig, grandmother of Canadian native art, painted long before there was such a thing as a contemporary native art movement on either side of the 49th parallel
- Daphne Odjig - Artnet
Daphne Odjig is a Canadian First Nations artist from the Odawa-Potawatomi nation The artist is commonly associated with her contribution to the Woodland school of painters, a group of indigenous painters whose work can be characterized by bold colors, abstract imagery, and solid black outlines
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