Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas' Carpe Fin Tells its Story at Seattle Art Museum
Gavin Borchert
Seattle Magazine
November 2019
Sensing an affinity between the iconography of his First Nation art tradition and the boldness and sweep of the Japanese film/graphic-novel visual style known as manga, Haida visual artist and British Columbia resident Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas combines the two—“committed to,” as he puts it, “hybridity as a positive force that opens a third space for critical engagement.” His first “Haida manga,” the graphic novel Red, came out in 2009. His follow-up is a new commission from the Seattle Art Museum, Carpe Fin, a 6-by-19-foot watercolor mural condensing a Haida folktale into one immense color-drenched panel. (You can also see the mural in book form, each of its 120 pages a section of the whole, upon Carpe Fin’s publication date, October 19.) The mural conveys a vitally timely moral—a warning about the dangers of human disconnection from the natural world—and is accompanied in this exhibit by Yahgulanaas’ drawings and sketches, together with artifacts by indigenous peoples of the Northwest.
11/1/19–11/1/2020. Seattle Art Museum, downtown
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