Artwork by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun,  Painted Guitar

L.P. Yuxweluptun
Painted Guitar

hand-painted in oil on guitar
signed and dated 1989
40.5 x 16 x 4.5 in ( 102.9 x 40.6 x 11.4 cm ) ( overall )

Auction Estimate: $7,000.00$5,000.00 - $7,000.00

Price Realized $5,040.00
Sale date: November 19th 2024

Provenance:
Commissioned from the Artist in 1989 by a Private Collection, Nova Scotia
Heffel, auction, Toronto, 26 July 2018, lot 14
Private Collection, Vancouver
This guitar was painted by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun in 1989 while he and the previous owner were living in Tall Cree, Alberta. The artwork was produced for the previous owner in lieu of payment.

Please note: this guitar does not have strings or tuners. Included with the lot is a hard guitar case.

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Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun
(1957)

Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun is a Cowichan/Syilx First Nations contemporary artist from British Columbia. He was born in Kamloops in 1957 to a father belonging to the Cowichan Tribes, a Coast Salish First Nation, and a Sylix mother, part of the Okanagan Nation Alliance. Yuxweluptun’s upbringing provided an acute awareness of the issues facing Aboriginal peoples. His parents were very politically active, encouraging their son to pursue a career in politics. He instead chose to create paintings, drawings, and assemblages that address many pressing issues, regarding land claims, damaging assimilationist policies, and environmental degradation.

Yuxweluptun enrolled at the Emily Carr College of Art and Design in the late 1970s and graduated in 1983 with an honours degree in painting. Yuxweluptun is among the most overtly critical artists practicing in Canada today. Yuxweluptun's strategy is to document and promote change in contemporary Indigenous history in large-scale paintings, using Coast Salish cosmology, Northwest Coast formal design elements, and the Western landscape tradition. His work incorporates traditional elements from Northwest First Nations art, as well as evocations of the Canadian landscape painting tradition derived from the Group of Seven. The figures in his paintings are not necessarily representations of real people—or specific Northwest coast beings or ceremonies—but instead comment on the way in which Native identity has been constructed from outside perspectives.