George Morrison (September 30, 1919 – April 17, 2000) was an Ojibweabstract painter and sculptor from Minnesota. His Ojibwe name was Wah Wah Teh Go Nay Ga Bo (Standing In the Northern Lights).[1] Morrison's work is associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement in the United States.[2]
Much of Morrison's non-figurative painting reflects the artist's sustained interest in landscape influenced by Indigenous visual cultures.[2] In 2020, he became the first Native American artist to be included in the New York School collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.[2]
Morrison was one of 12 children in a poor household. His father worked as a trapper and used his fluency in the Ojibwe language to interpret court proceedings. As a child, Morrison spent months in a full body cast recovering from a surgery. During this period of recuperation, he began to draw.[5]
Morrison briefly attended a Native American boarding school in Hayward, Wisconsin.[6] Due to poor health, Morrison returned to Minnesota and attended a Native American sanatorium in Onigum, Minnesota and the Gillette State Hospital for Crippled Children in St. Paul.[4] He attended Grand Marais High School, graduating in 1938, and then the Minneapolis School of Art, now the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, graduating in 1943.[1]
In 1947, Morrison took a teaching position at the Cape Ann Art School; the following summer Morrison and Albert Kresch took over the school and renamed it the Rockport Art School.[4] Morrison met his first wife, Ada Reed, in Provincetown, Massachusetts. The two were married in 1948.[4]
In 1968, Morrison won the grand prize at the Fourth Invitational Exhibition of Indian Arts and Crafts in Washington, D.C.[5] In 1969, he was awarded an Honorary Master of Fine Arts at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design.
Beginning in 1970, he taught American Indian studies and art at the University of Minnesota until he retired in 1983.[1] During the mid-1970s, Morrison and his wife acquired land near Grand Portage, Minnesota on Lake Superior, which they named Red Rock.[1] This became their home and studio.[1] Morrison suffered some life-threatening illnesses, including being diagnosed with Castleman's disease in 1984, but kept on working until he died at Red Rock in April 2000.[1][4]
In 1999, Morrison was awarded the title of Master Artist by the Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art.[7]
Legacy
In 2022, Morrison's work was honored by the United States Postal Service with the release of a stamp series featuring five of his paintings.[8]
Art
Morrison learned the established Western methods of representational painting during his time at the Minneapolis School of Art. However, during his time at the Art Students League in New York City Morrison's style became more modernist and abstract.[4]
Morrison acknowledged a variety of influences in his art, including cubism, surrealism, and abstract expressionism. In his drawings and paintings, Morrison used abstract forms to represent organic figures. Morrison commonly used landscapes and mosaic patterns in his paintings. For his wood collages, Morrison would gather driftwood along shorelines. Morrison's totem works were formally designed and glued to a piece of plywood that was the backbone of the piece.[6]
Twin Cities Tile and Marble Company became experts in moving Morrison's beautiful granite "Tableau – A Native American Mosaic." It's been moved from the entrance to the IDS Center (1992), to the front of the Minneapolis Central Library (2004), to between 11th and 12th Streets (2020) at the entrance to the Loring Greenway, all on Nicollet in downtown Minneapolis.[10]
The United States Postal Service released five Morrison paintings in a series of Forever Stamps on April 22, 2022.[11] Among the paintings featured on the Morrison Forever stamps are Sun and River (1949), Phenomena Against the Crimson: Lake Superior Landscape (1985), Lake Superior Landscape (1981), Spirit Path, New Day, Red Rock Variation: Lake Superior Landscape (1990), and Untitled (1995).[5]
Morrison also had the honor of having his paintings be presented Whitney Museum as a part of the exhibition "The Whitney's Collection: Selections from 1990-1965" June 28, 2019-. The three artworks featured are: "The Antagonist",1965; "Landscape", 1950;"Untitled" 1953[12]
Selected solo exhibitions
1948–1960: Grand Central Moderns Gallery, New York, NY
1990: "Standing in the Northern Lights: George Morrison, A retrospective," circ., Tweed Museum of Art - University of Minnesota, Duluth and the Minnesota Museum of Art, St. Paul, MN
1998: "Morrison's Horizon," Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minnesota Artists Exhibition Program, Minneapolis, MN
2010: "From the Minnesota Museum of American Art", Bockley Gallery, Minneapolis, Minnesota
George Morrison, along with writer/editor Margot Fortunato Galt, discuss a book about his art, Turning the Feather Around, published by Minnesota Historical Society Press. They are interviewed by writer Joanne Hart in George's studio along Lake Superior on the Grand Portage Reservation. Northern Lights TV Series #409 (1998) [https://reflections.mndigital.org/catalog/p16022coll38:93#/kaltura_video] or on YouTube: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8MXPuf5h7Y]