Lou-ann Neel Wins Fulmer Award in First Nations Art
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The accomplished multidisciplinary artist, designer and curator comes from a family of renowned Kwakwaka鈥檞akw artists.
Artist, designer, curator and community advocate Lou-ann Neel (BFA 2015) has won a Fulmer Award in First Nations Art from the BC Achievement Foundation (BCAF).
Lou-ann, who comes from a family of renowned Kwakwaka鈥檞akw artists including Charlie James, Mungo Martin, Ellen Neel and Kevin Cranmer, she grew up viewing creative work as something a person simply did, rather than as a calling to a life of exception.鈥ㄢ
鈥淚 just didn鈥檛 think anything I did was anything special because I鈥檝e been surrounded by artists my whole life, and my whole thing was, I want to be as good as them. I鈥檝e never seen myself so much as an artist,鈥 she said.
鈥淲hen I was learning to design, that鈥檚 when I realized it鈥檚 not just a great privilege to learn but it鈥檚 kind of a family obligation to continue our own family tradition.鈥
Lou-ann has been practicing Kwakwaka鈥檞akw design for more than 40 years. Her practice includes working in jewelry, textiles and hides, paintings and prints, and digital applications including animation, storybook illustration and 3D printing.
鈥淚 put my work out there as a symbol and a signifier of who I am and who our people are.鈥
鈥淥ne of Lou-ann鈥檚 first passions was carving, and she is continuing to practice the techniques she learned through an apprenticeship in wood carving with her brother, Kevin Cranmer,鈥 the .
鈥淚n addition to her artistic practice, Lou-ann is a community arts advocate 鈥 always seeking to build solutions that will enable Indigenous artists to balance their respective rights, responsibilities and obligations with new, contemporary expressions of their work.鈥
As Curator of Indigenous Collections and Acting Head of Indigenous Collections and Repatriation Department at the Royal BC Museum, Lou-ann 鈥淸works] closely with BC First Nations communities to address repatriation matters,鈥 the statement adds.
The jury for this year鈥檚 prize included Associate Director of Aboriginal Programs at 全民彩票 Connie Watts, and Director of Aboriginal Programs Brenda Crabtree, who is also Special Advisor to the President on Indigenous Initiatives. Lou-ann鈥檚 fellow 2020 recipients are Jaalen Edenshaw, Kelly Robinson, Cole Speck, Evelyn Vanderhoop and Nathan Wilson.鈥ㄢ
BC Achievement is an independent foundation established in 2003 to celebrate community service, arts, humanities and enterprise. The Fulmer Award in First Nations Art is made possible through the support of the Vancouver-based Fulmer Foundation.
In a video celebrating Lou-ann鈥檚 practice, she says winning the Fulmer Award was 鈥減robably the biggest surprise of my life.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 strange, because 鈥 when I go about my art I just go about my art. A lot of artists I鈥檝e spoken to, they don鈥檛 think that what they do is anything special. They just do what they were taught. It鈥檚 most important that you believe in yourself. Don鈥檛 let anyone tell you you can鈥檛. Make that the reason why you do. I put my work out there as a symbol and a signifier of who I am and who our people are. That鈥檚 when I feel like I鈥檓 an artist.鈥