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Nootka oil
Nootka oil











nootka oil

Though Macdonald would return to themes from Nootka in later works, Drying Herring Roe, 1938, was the last representational canvas he painted of life in Nootka. In September 1938 the Vancouver Art Gallery reproduced the recently acquired painting on the cover of its Bulletin, and the following year included it in the Canadian exhibition at the San Francisco Golden Gate Exposition. The priest, his hand raised, creates a strong vertical focus, leading us both forward toward the open grave and the mask and then beyond the blue cross on the casket toward two centrally located crosses in the middle ground and on, following the curving path, into the distance, where totem poles and a lighthouse border the ocean. The painting is striking in its organization, displaying a designer’s delight in carefully balanced areas of colour and pattern. The mask was absent in the preliminary sketch, and it seems to challenge our entry into the scene, its expressive features dramatically evoking the continuing presence of the power of the old ways.

nootka oil

Though the graveyard and the priest in Indian Burial are clearly Christian, Macdonald has added a level of complexity to the narrative by introducing in the right foreground a mourner with a traditional ceremonial mask. This work, based on a sketch he had done in situ, was painted after the artist’s return to Vancouver. Although he painted a number of small oil-on-panel works, he completed only one major canvas, Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound, B.C., 1935, during his stay at Nootka. In this image, as in his other Nootka sketches and paintings, Macdonald attempts to capture the spirit of life in the Nuu-chah-nulth village. A preparatory sketch for Indian Burial, Nootka, 1937. Vancouver Art Gallery Jock Macdonald, Indian Burial at Nootka, 1935, ink on paper with pencil grid laid over top, 7.4 x 4 cm, Vancouver Art Gallery. Jock Macdonald, Indian Burial, Nootka, 1937













Nootka oil