Carl Ray
(1942 - 1978)
Previously Sold Works
CARL RAY
Portage Scene
oil on canvas
signed lower right
24 x 30 ins ( 61 x 76.2 cms )
Auction Estimate: $1,500.00 - $2,000.00
Price Realized $2,360.00
Sale date: October 17th 2018
CARL RAY
Hanging on for Life
oil on canvas board
signed lower right; signed, titled, dated “Oct. 25 1970” and inscribed “Sandy Lake Ont.” on the reverse
18 x 24 ins ( 45.7 x 61 cms )
Auction Estimate: $2,000.00 - $2,500.00
Price Realized $2,400.00
Sale date: December 15th 2020
CARL RAY
The Thunderbird Man
oil on canvas board
signed lower right; signed, titled and dated “June 1968” on the reverse; a typed passage describing the legend of the Thunderbird Man attached to the reverse (also signed by the artist)
24 x 30 ins ( 61 x 76.2 cms )
Auction Estimate: $2,000.00 - $3,000.00
Price Realized $2,100.00
Sale date: March 23rd 2016
CARL RAY
Water Bird
gouache
signed and dated 1973 lower right; titled and dated to two labels on the reverse
19 x 12.5 ins ( 48.3 x 31.8 cms ) ( sight )
Auction Estimate: $1,000.00 - $1,500.00
Price Realized $1,440.00
Sale date: January 23rd 2024
CARL RAY
Bird and Frog
acrylic on canvas board
signed lower centre
16 x 24 ins ( 40.6 x 61 cms )
C. Ray Biography
(1942 - 1978)
Carl Ray was born in 1942 at Northwind Lake, the youngest of five children. Northwind Lake was the siteof the Beren’s River Mine where his parents, James and Maggie Rae had settled to make a living at laboring jobs. The Ray’s were membersof the Caribou Clan.
Mr. Ray was an important and dynamic member of the Woodland Artists. Carl Ray died in Sioux Lookout, Ontario.
In a brief ten years of active painting, Carl Ray was one of the bright stars of a group of aboriginal painters call The Woodland Artists. The other popular members of this group were Jackson Beardy, Daphne Odjig, Norval Morrisseau , Joshim Kakegamick and Roy Thomas. All these artists were enjoying success and fame, but Ray had his own unique graphic style when compared with others. Ray’s visual animations of Cree legends move with a freedom….he transfers so much power, even aggression, to his images that all of them look like they are on fire.
Carl and his family moved too Sandy Lake Reserve in northwestern Ontario when the Beren’s River Mine closed. Carl was sent to McIntosh Residential School when he was 8 years old. His father passed away in 1956 and Carl returned home to Sandy Lake to take care of his aging mother. He was 14 when he completed grade 6 at the residential school.