Paintings of Indigenous ways of life in a northern Saskatchewan hamlet return home
CBC
A little over 30 years ago, Mary Joyce moved to Black Point, Sask., for a year, and she left the remote Northern Saskatchewan hamlet with an impressive art collection and a deep appreciation for the Indigenous community's ways of life.
Now in 2023, she's giving back to the community by donating her paintings in the Black Point collection that vividly depict the people she met, the stories she heard and the lessons she learned.
Joyce and her then husband left Edmonton to start their one year stint in Black Point, near La Loche, Sask., in October of 1989. She says no white person had ever spent the full winter in the hamlet.
A lot of her paintings focus on the women's roles because Joyce says they helped integrate her into the community.
"The women were looking out for me, they basically educated me, took care of me, taught me what they were doing, and made quite a lot of jokes, along with me," Joyce said on CBC Radio's Saskatchewan Weekend.
"I learned a lot of things about how to carry on in a community like that, as well as life lessons."
Joyce hoped her paintings could spread awareness around the ways of life in Black Point.
"My paintings are mostly about the old ways, because Black Point was a kind of a community where people who still wanted to pursue the old ways, their traditions," Joyce said.
"Hopefully, through the validation of those traditions we'll assist people to see how valuable they are in the whole world."
One of the experiences that stands out most for Joyce is spending time with the local woman in the smoking teepee tending to moose hide.
"Those are good memories. They were very intimate, " Joyce said.
The homecoming of the Black Point collection is being done with the help of the Mann Art Gallery in Prince Albert. The art gallery received the donation from Joyce and transported some of the paintings up to the La Loche Friendship Centre last week. The paintings will be in La Loche on rotating long-term loans.
"People came through and immediately recognized their relatives, their great aunties, their grandmothers," Marcus Miller, the Mann Art Gallery's curator and director said.
"I'm telling you, there were smiles on everybody's faces and I knew that these paintings had truly come home to the right place."