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Graham
Pettman was born in 1938 at Fort Vermillion, Alberta, of a Cree mother
and a British father. Being nomadic most of his life, Graham has been
traveling with his work between BC and Alberta. Many of his works end
up in sculpture collections outside of Canada.
Graham grew up in
various towns in Alberta, spending time with Cree relatives living in
the old ways. Observing the lifestyle of his grandfather, a herbalist
and trapper, Graham saw a man who lived a simple life surrounded by nature
right up until his death at nearly one hundred years of age. Graham left
school early to join his father's line of work at the opening of the aluminum
smelter in Kitimat, BC. His father, a former RAF pilot in World War II,
traveler and avid reader, had many stories of his early years in northern
trading posts where he learned the Cree language. After joining the army
and travelling accross Canada, Graham worked at various jobs across Canada
finally settling in the Great Lakes. Here he took up the trade as a house
and sign painter.
Graham enjoyed sketching
and had met and been influenced by A.Y. Jackson as a youth in Yellowknife
and was inspired to attend the Alberta College of Art in 1965. After 1
1/2 years at the College, Graham headed back to the road, moving from
Victoria to Whitehorse, the Queen Charlotte Islands, White Rock and once
more across Canada to the Expo '67 in Montreal, spending some time in
Fredericton, NB. While he traveled, Graham never put down his pencil and
sketchbook, studying people, reading books and observing the Hippie, Black
and Red Power movements. Graham produced numerous books of pencil sketches
and began to produce large, brightly colored paintings depicting the social
commentaries of the time, with hands being a dominant and recurring theme
in his works. As a child care worker involved with Native children and
befriending a former traditional Nootka dancer, Graham began reestablishing
some of his Cree roots during the Seventies. By 1976 when he moved to
the west side of Wells Grey Park, he concentrated on creating wood sculptures
although he continued to paint the local forests. He carved canes of local
wood, using multi-image themes like his paintings; images evolving spontaneously
as the wood designated. Graham was awarded first prize in the cane division
of the CNE in 1980. He carves fictitious portraits on burls, again following
natural contours and using what nature provides for drama or humour.
Encouraged by a friend
and his brother to work in soapstone, he began carving full-time in 1982.
More of Graham's Cree background and Native heritage is depicted with
the integration of the symbols nature displays. His inspiration comes
from the existing shape of the stone before he commences carving. Graham
feels he is fortunate to live in an area where he can participate in the
Native culture, reemerging ancient traditions relating to the Creator.
Keeping relationships
between people as a dominant theme, Graham now also enjoys carving the
animals which he has the opportunity to encounter in the area in which
he lives, the Cariboo region of central British Columbia. He enjoys the
company of his wife Virginia, a painter, and their three children: Demian,
Mikara and Aaron. |
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