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Description

A pencil drawing on a blue bookmark. The bookmark is vertically oriented. The front-side is a hand-drawn image of a lightning serpent(?). Curled projections, on top of the serpent's head, extend from the shaded snout to the base of the head. The lips of the creature are darkly shaded in with pencil. Rounded teeth line the upper and lower jaw. Two bell-like shapes, each with three segmented appendages, are drawn on its back. The reverse-side of the bookmark is machine-printed in black ink. At the top, an image of a cat is superimposed resting on the top edge of the text box's border; within the border is the bookstore's commercial information including the store's name, "Bookends."

History Of Use

These 62 small works (3223/1-62) comprise a collection of drawings in pencil, ink, pencil crayon, and felt pen made by the artist between the years 1968 and 2015. During that period the artist has identified himself by the following names: Ron Hamilton; Hupquatchew; Ki-ke-in; Kwayatsapalth; Chuuchkamalthnii; and Haa’yuups. The drawings are, for the most part, applied to the backs of bookmarks acquired from a range of bookshops; some are applied to other pieces of paper or cutouts from his earlier silkscreen prints. Many of the images represent killer whales, often in conjunction with accoutrements and symbols of Nuu-chah-nulth whaling. The juxtaposition of bookmark and representation of Nuu-chah-nulth himwits’a, or narrative, is a deliberate and meaningful placement of two distinct knowledge systems in relationship with one another. Ephemeral drawings like these were not created for the market; the artist has long made them for himself and sometimes as gifts for relatives and friends; they are a way of sharing his knowledge and experience about Nuu-chah-nulth ways of knowing, thinking about, and being in this world; they are expressive of what he calls kiitskiitsa: marks made with intention.

Item History

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