Syllabic Translator

i u a pi pu pa ti tu ta ki ku ka gi gu ga mi mu ma ni nu na si su sa li lu la ji ju ja vi vu va ri ru ra qi qu qa ngi ngu nga lhi lhu lha

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Joshim Kakegamic

Anishinaabe

(1952-1993)

First Name: Joshim

Last Name: Kakegamic

Full Name: Joshim Kakegamic

Date of birth: 1952

Place of birth: Sandy Lake First Nation, Ontario, Canada

Date of death: 1993

Place of death: Keewaywin Reserve, Ontario

Community / Heritage: Cree

Sex: Male

Art Media: Silkscreen, acrylic, ink

Bio:

Joshim Kakegamic was born in 1952 at the Sandy Lake First Nation reserve, Ontario, Canada. He began painting as a teenager in the late 1960s under the guidance of his Ojibwe brother-in-law Norval Morrisseau and Cree artist Carl Ray.  Kakegamic worked with Morrisseau and Ray to workshops at local reserves and in schools across Ontario.

In 1973, inspired by Daphne Odjig’s company, Indian Prints of Canada Ltd., Kakegamic established the Triple K Cooperative printing company together with his brothers Goyce and Henry. Based in Red Lake, the company enabled them and other artists, including Morrisseau, Barry Peters, Paddy Peters and Saul Williams, to present themselves and their work in an independent and unique way. The Triple K Cooperative existed for ten years and became the largest and most successful Indigenous economic development initiative in Northwestern Ontario. It provided an infrastructure that resulted in many artists having their work exhibited and acquired by prominent art galleries and museums in Canada and around the world.

Throughout 1970s and 1980s, Kakegamic took part in a number of exhibitions throughout Ontario as well as in a Woodland Art group show at Canada House in London, England and in Lahr, Germany.

In 1993, at the age of 41, Kakegamic died while attempting to save a drowning person’s life.

His paintings are held in private and corporate collections throughout Canada and abroad including at the McMichael Museum, The Canadian Museum of History (previously known as The Canadian Museum of Civilization), the Royal Ontario Museum and the Thunder Bay Art Gallery.

Exhibitions

  • 1977:  Toronto's Aggregation Gallery
  • 2008: Art Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta,Canada
  • 2012: Gallery Gevik, Toronto, Ontario. Canadian Aboriginal Art: A look through the generations
  • "Woodland Indian Art Exhibition" at Canada House in London, England
  • "Woodland Indian Art Exhibition”, Lahr, Germany

Collections

  • Simon Fraser University Art Center
  • The McMichael Canadian Collection
  • The Royal Ontario Museum
  • Toronto's Aggregation Gallery in 1977
  • The Canadian Museum of Civilization
  • The McMichael Canadian Art Collection
  • The Thunder Bay Art Gallery

Articles

Artwork

Title Last Sold At Auction
ANIMAL SPIRIT
"FRAZIER & JEROME" & "BLEEDING LOON" 2021-09 (September 2021)
EARLY BIRD 2022-03 (March 2022)
FISH 2022-11 (November 2022)
THUNDERBIRD, 1982; DREAMING, 1977 2024-01 (January 2024)
TWO WORKS: THREE BIRDS, TURTLE (1974) 2022-10 (October 2022)
UNTITLED (MOOSE) 2022-11 (November 2022)
UNTITLED (OWL) 2019-11 (November 2019)
UNTITLED (WOLVERINE) 2019-11 (November 2019)
WHITE NECKLACE 2024-11 (November 2024)

Recent Auction Results

WHITE NECKLACE
Estimate: 200 — 250
Sold: Nov 2024 — Sold For: $300
THUNDERBIRD, 1982; DREAMING, 1977
Estimate: 200 — 400
Sold: Jan 2024 — Sold For: $147.60
FISH
Estimate: 100 — 125
Sold: Nov 2022 — Sold For: $216
UNTITLED (MOOSE)
Estimate: 200 — 300
Sold: Nov 2022 — Sold For: $960
TWO WORKS: THREE BIRDS, TURTLE (1974)
Estimate: 120 — 200
Sold: Oct 2022 — Sold For: $132
EARLY BIRD
Estimate: 60 — 80
Sold: Mar 2022 — Sold For: $60

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