Saskatchewan Art News
Renowned Saskatchewan artist Allen Sapp dies, Age 87
Famed Saskatchewan painter Allen Sapp died in his sleep this morning, at age 87.
Sapp was born in 1929 on the Red Pheasant Reserve in northern
Saskatchewan, a descendant of the great plains Cree Chief Poundmaker. As
a child, Sapp was often bed-ridden with illness, and he began drawing
and painting with the encouragement of his grandmother, Maggie Soonias.
In 1966, Sapp met Dr. Allan Gonor
while trying to sell his paintings at the North Battleford Medical
Clinic. Gonor saw Sapp's talent and became a close friend and patron.
With Gonor's encouragement and after studying painting with University
of Saskatchewan professor Wynona Mulcaster, Sapp continued to paint and
gained a wider audience for his work, beginning with successful
exhibitions in Saskatoon and Vancouver in 1969 and 1970. He soon gained
national and international recognition for his paintings depicting the
life and culture of the northern plains Cree. Drawn from his own
experiences growing up on a northern reserve, Sapp's paintings provide a
glimpse into the everyday activities and special celebrations of the
Cree people. Diana Loercher of the Christian Science Monitor observed,
“A radiant light permeates most of his paintings.... It is evident that
not only his art but his identity is deeply rooted in Indian culture.”
Sapp had been the subject of documentaries including Allen Sapp, By Instict a Painter, the National Film Board of Canada's Colours of Pride, the CBC's On the Road Again, as well as boosk such as A Cree Life by John Warner and Two Spirits Soar by W.P. Kinsella. In 1975, he was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy
of Arts, and he received the Saskatchewan Award of Merit (1985), the
Order of Canada (1987), an honourary doctorate from the University of
Regina (1998), a Saskatchewan Arts Board Lifetime Achievement Award
(1996) and a National Aboriginal Lifetime Achievement Award (1999).
In
1989, the Allen Sapp Gallery, Canada's only public art gallery named
for a living artist, was opened in North Battleford. The most extensive
permanent collection of Sapp's paintings can be found there, though his
work is represented in many other public and private collections across
the country.
In 1994, the MacKenzie Art Gallery (Regina)
launched a touring retrospective of Sapp's work. The exhibition was
called “Kiskayetum” – Sapp's Cree name meaning “he perceives it.” In
2003, Allen won a Governor General's Literary Arts Award for the
children's book The Song Within My Heart, which Sapp had illustrated.
Allen Sapp died December 29th, 2015, in North Battleford, Saskatchewan.
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