08/30/2024

5/150: David Blackwood – Whales and Tales

Fire Down the Labrador and The Great Peace of Brian and Martin Windsor

David Blackwood (1941 -2022) told stories about Newfoundland in the form of epic visual narratives for 30 years. He is widely regarded as Canada’s most accomplished printmaker. (Above: Fire Down the Labrador (left) and The Great Peace of Brian and Martin Winsor)

david-blackwood-fire-in-indian-bay

He explored the timeless theme of the struggle for survival between humans and nature in one of the most exposed and hostile environments on earth. (Above: Fire in Indian Bay)

Mummer Groups from Pound Cove
Mummer Groups from Pound Cove

His strangely beautiful images came to represent to many of us the essence of Newfoundland’s landscape and traditional culture. (Below: Outward Bound)

blackwood-outward-bound
hauling-job-sturges-house-web

I have a particular love of this image, Hauling Job Sturges House, the cover on some editions of Annie Proulx’s novel The Shipping News. It fits the scene where a house is hauled across the ice with ropes in the gray winter of Newfoundland.

“He has created an iconography of Newfoundland which is as universal as it is personal, as mythic as it is rooted in reality, and as timeless as it is linked to specific events,” the Art Gallery of Ontario said in notes for a 2011 exhibition.

oscar-nominated-blackwood-by-tony-ianzelo-andy-thomson-nfb

See this half hour National Film Board of Canada documentary on Blackwood if you want to delve more deeply into his extraordinary etching.  See the video, here.

David Blackwood’s obituary (2022) here.

Represented by Emma Butler Gallery, St. John’s, Newfoundland, here and Heffel Gallery Limited in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto and Montreal, here (enter David Blackwood in the search box of the main Heffel site to see all lots).

Canadian Encyclopedia entry, here


This is #5 in the series 150 Artists.


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9 thoughts on “5/150: David Blackwood – Whales and Tales

  1. I love these! It’s so great to find out about artists that I didn’t know about. You have introduced me to many.
    Blackwood’s style is as cold and lonely as any northern Canadian climate. In my mind, I imagined Songs of a Sourdough by Robert Service to look like this.

  2. I love David Blackwood’s work. He is a superb printmaker, as well as draftsman, and, of course raconteur. I appreciate his technical prowess, particularly because I believe we both studied with the same demanding printmaking teacher teacher, the infamus Fred Hagan.

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