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Guide to Indian Country
- June, 2000
Cultural ecotourism
- Ktunaxa style
Take in Alberta's southwest
Powwow - a healing experience
The do's and don'ts of powwow
Powwow etiquette
dictates respect for tradition
Painter believes "art
is us"
Experience the people
of a time long ago
Generations recorded
Can't travel? Try Native film
Summer solstice celebrated
in far North
Law student crowned
Miss Indian World
Escape to nature
Gathering of Nations
powwow biggest yet
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
Painter believes "art is us"
By Stan Bartlett
Windspeaker Contributor
REGINA
Dennis Morrison was found on the dance floor at Checkers in
the Landmark Inn, one of a dozen-and-a-half frantic workmen trying
to refurbish the Regina pub in time for the next day's grand
opening. With a paint brush in hand he was up a ladder touching
up grey stones on the ceiling, and readying himself for an all
night job of drawing a large mural of a truck driving through
mock wallpaper.
"I was asked
to add a dab of orange to the middle of the stones after I had
finished the job," said Morrison, who then starts to chuckle.
It was a mundane job for this well-known potter, headdress designer,
jewellery maker, leather, dreamcatcher and wall hanging craftsman,
and above all, painter. But Morrison, who goes by the Cree name
that means "He who lives with the king" was enjoying
himself just the same.
Painter Dennis Morrison is happy learning the traditional
ways so they can be passed on to youth and others through his
art.
When the 50-year-old from Ochapowace, Sask. was asked if he would
describe himself as a happy person, Morrison quickly agreed,
but he thinks long and hard about what makes him sad, saying,
sweetgrass helps during these times.
"The only thing that makes me blue is when an old person
or an Elder dies because one of my teachers is gone."
Many of his works are on permanent display at the Landmark Inn,
his home-away-from-home: Several monochrome acylic paintings
hang in the restaurant. In keeping with the First Nations theme
of the hotel, he painted a landscape mural in Room 160, complete
with eagles and stars on the ceiling that sparkle when the lights
are turned out. (The painting was done only after the room was
stripped, and the room smudged, purified and cleansed.) The show
stopper, located around the corner from the front desk, is a
large painting about Indian identity dominated by a buffalo hunter
with a horned headdress.
"I use a lot of realism and symbolism," explains Morrison,
"to reflect the good hunting, the peacefulness, the meaning
of the traditional upbringing."
Morrison, who lived on Ochapowace until he was 16, was raised
in the traditional ways. As the co-ordinator of cultural camps
at Ochapowace, he still returns there to learn and to pass on
the traditions of food, dance, games and so on. The cultural
camps have been held for two weeks each summer during the last
20 years. Initially they were held for band members, but then
were opened to such groups as the Regina Police Service and even
a visiting group of 40 people from Taiwan.
"What got me started was cultural camp. From then on art
became more deep and meaningful," explains Morrison.
"We worked with the environment. Each pole of the tipi -
it's a value system - learning to be a better person identity-wise.
I take you back about a 100 years in the lodge. You live in there
and there are no watches, no radios, nothing."
Since attending art college in Brandon, Man. years ago, Morrison
has lived in Saskatoon, Kamsack and Regina, which has been his
home for the last five years. Besides learning the First Nation
traditions from Elders at Ochapowace, he has lived and studied
for a year with the Pueblo Indians in New Mexico. He's travelled
to Singapore as a cultrual counsellor with the Saskatchewan Native
Dance Troupe.
Morrison's work is on display at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum
in the First Nations Gallery. He painted a 50 by 40 foot stand-alone
mural of the round dance, plus a small diorama on the Dene.
For Morrison, who says his house resembles a store, it's all
summed up at the bottom of his business card, " Art is us
- it's everthing."
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