James Hart wins $100,000 Audain Prize as British Columbia’s most distinguished artist
VANCOUVER — British Columbia carver James Hart, hereditary chief of the Eagle Clan of the Haida Nation, has won the $100,000 Audain Prize for Visual Art as the province’s most distinguished artist.
Michael Audain, chairman of the Audain Foundation, described Hart as “one of B.C.’s greatest living artists” and “a carver in a long line of Haida artists.”
Hart was born in 1952 in the Delkatla community of Masset, on Haida Gwaii, and spent time in the fishing industry before turning to art in 1978 when he was hired to assist artist Robert Davidson in creating the Charles Edenshaw Memorial House in Masset.
Hart studied Haida language, ceremony and cultural values and inherited the traditional title Chief 7idansuu, which had previously been carried by master carver Charles Edenshaw.