Beaver - Limited Edition Print
Beaver - Limited Edition Print
17" x 13"
Unnumbered. Signed and dated.
1970
Beaver is based on a design on a pair of leather leggings featured in the book Primitive Art by Franz Boas. This was Davidson’s first print to feature two colours and many of the principles found on bentwood boxes.
“I had the fortune to do some commission work in Ottawa. I was able to study the box designs in the museum and they had a vast collection of Haida boxes – boxes inside boxes. George MacDonald at the Museum of Man [now the Canadian Museum of History] gave me free rein to see the boxes in the collection. The Field Museum in Chicago also has a large box collection.
I started to blend one idea into another, creating an image bank from the hundreds of box designs that I had seen, and this was the start of merging ideas from different sources, but the basic design came from the leggings”
- Robert Davidson
Wyatt, Gary, and Robert Davidson. Echoes of the Supernatural: The Graphic Art of Robert Davidson. Figure 1 Publishing, 2022.
Robert Davidson
CULTURAL GROUP:
Haida
BORN:
November 4, 1946
BIRTHPLACE:
Hydaberg, Alaska
Robert Davidson belongs to the Eagle clan. He comes from a family of acclaimed Haida artists, including his father, Claude Davidson, his great grandfather, Charles Edenshaw, and his brother, Reg Davidson. He was born in Alaska, but raised in Massett, Haida Gwaii. Robert works in cedar, gold, silver, argillite, bronze, and silkscreen. In 1959, he carved argillite totem poles with his father and grandfather. Between 1966-69, he apprenticed with Bill Reid, and from 1967-68 studied at the Vancouver School of Art. In 1969, Robert carved and raised a 40-foot totem pole in Masset, which was the first to be raised since 1871. In 1977, Robert and his apprentices carved a memorial to his great grandfather for the Charles Edenshaw Memorial Longhouse in Old Masset. This building would later burn down. In 1984, Robert carved a talking stick for Pope John Paul II to commemorate his visit to Vancouver. In 1985, he carved three totem poles for the Pepsi Co. International Sculpture Garden, and in 1986 he was commissioned to create a painting for Expo ’86 in Vancouver. In 1992, Robert was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts at the University of Victoria, BC. In 1993, there was a major retrospective of Robert’s works at the Vancouver Art Gallery, which then travelled on to the Museum of Civilization in Hull, Quebec. In May of 1996, Robert was awarded the Order of Canada. In 2004, Robert had another solo show, at Vancouver’s Museum of Anthropology titled The Abstract Edge. Publications include: Robert Davidson, Haida Printmaker (1979); Robert Davidson, Eagle of the Dawn by Hilary Stewart (1993); Challenging Traditions: Contemporary First Nations Art of the Northwest Coast by Ian M. Thom (2009); and Four Decades: An Innocent Gesture by Robert Davidson (2009). In 2019, Robert was featured in the landmark publication Understanding Northwest Coast Indigenous Jewelry by author Alex Dawkins.