Allan Syliboy’s “Tuft’s Cove Survivor,” a painting at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, depicts the effects of the Great Explosion in Halifax harbour in 1917 on the often-forgotten Mi’kmaq settlement on the Dartmouth shore. A mural now hanging on the outside wall of the Maritime Museum in Halifax is a larger version of the painting with two additional side pieces.
#Syliboy #ArtGalleryNovaScotia #Halifax #NovaScotia #Mikmaq #Indigenous #IndigenousArt #MikmaqArt #CanadianArt
#canadianart #mikmaqart #Indigenousart #indigenous #mikmaq #novascotia #halifax #artgallerynovascotia #syliboy
Allan Syliboy’s “Tuft’s Cove Survivor,” a painting in the collection of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, depicts the effects of the Great Explosion in Halifax harbour in 1917 on the often-forgotten Mi’kmaq settlement on the Dartmouth shore. A mural now hanging on the outside wall of the Maritime Museum in Halifax is a larger version of the painting with two additional side pieces.
#Syliboy #ArtGalleryNovaScotia #Halifax #NovaScotia #Mikmaq #Indigenous #IndigenousArt #MikmaqArt
#mikmaqart #Indigenousart #indigenous #mikmaq #novascotia #halifax #artgallerynovascotia #syliboy
Maud paints the train again, this time on a tray and changing it from “Erie” to “Chaplin.” #MaudLewis #FolkArt #ArtGalleryNovaScotia #AdvertisingArt
#advertisingart #artgallerynovascotia #folkart #maudlewis
Maud turns the Erie Railroad ad into a painting in her own style. #MaudLewis #FolkArt #ArtGalleryNovaScotia #AdvertisingArt
#advertisingart #artgallerynovascotia #folkart #maudlewis
The ad behind a Maud Lewis painting. #MaudLewis #FolkArt #ArtGalleryNovaScotia #AdvertisingArt
#advertisingart #artgallerynovascotia #folkart #maudlewis