Cape Breton Post

‘Maker of Monsters’ film profiles Indigenous art ‘treasure’ Beau Dick

- BY VICTORIA AHEARN

To some, the late Indigenous artist and activist Beau Dick was “almost Christ-like.”

Such is the descriptor offered in the new documentar­y “Maker of Monsters: The Extraordin­ary Life of Beau Dick,” which shows the Kwakwaka’wakw hereditary chief with the long, grey hair and flowing silver beard leading a group of protesters from the northern tip of Vancouver Island to advocate for Indigenous rights and environmen­tal issues.

The Alert Bay, B.C., native, who died a year ago, was also a generous mentor and staged traditiona­l copper-breaking ceremonies at legislatur­es to shame the government over its relationsh­ip with its Indigenous communitie­s.

His renowned masks have sold in internatio­nal galleries for tens of thousands of dollars and have increased “exponentia­lly” in value over the past year as the world catches on to his great legacy, say Natalie Boll and LaTiesha Ti’si’tla Fazakas, directors of the doc that screens Thursday and April 1 in Cineplex Odeon theatres in 11 Canadian cities.

“I’d known Beau since 2000 and I immediatel­y thought there was something special about him,” says Fazakas, who owns her own gallery in Vancouver and is a leading expert in Northwest Coast art.

“But it seemed to me that he really lacked a champion. I was like ... ‘More and more people need to meet Beau, because I feel like we have this treasure here and I don’t think we all know it and we should.”’

The directors started working on the doc in 2012 after Fazakas invited Boll to her home to view one of Dick’s striking wooden masks in a bid to convince her to make the film with her.

Dick’s works are known for evoking a strong reaction in viewers and that’s what happened to Boll when she walked down Fazakas’s hallway and saw the large piece depicting a mythic being known as a Wild Woman of the Woods.

“I was emotional and it was very real and alive,” says Boll, who is a director of Athene Films in Vancouver.

“I’d just never had that kind of connection with art in that way.”

The two finished the film just a few months before Dick died on March 27, 2017 at age 61 from complicati­ons of a stroke.

They captured the soft-spoken, self-professed workaholic in his workshop, at traditiona­l potlatch ceremonies that were once banned in Canada, and on his activism journeys.

“For me, coming from not an art background per se in the art world, meeting Beau for the first time was a very inspiring experience on a human level,” says Boll.

“He had this amazing artistic ability and also an ability to connect to people in a different way and really mentor and inspire people.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Indigenous artist and activist Beau Dick is shown in the new documentar­y “Maker of Monsters: The Extraordin­ary Life of Beau Dick,” in this undated photo.
CP PHOTO Indigenous artist and activist Beau Dick is shown in the new documentar­y “Maker of Monsters: The Extraordin­ary Life of Beau Dick,” in this undated photo.

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