A large, sculpted head with pronounced features and textured hair sits on a tall, rectangular pedestal. The head has an expressionless face, with large, almond-shaped eyes and a small mouth. The sculpture is displayed in a glass enclosure, with a dark background that contrasts with the lighter materials of the head and pedestal.

Bill Reid, Bear Mother, 1991. Plaster on marble pedestal. SFU Art Collection. Gift of Allan and Faigie Waisman, 2002.

A large, sculpted head with pronounced features and textured hair sits on a tall, rectangular pedestal. The head has an expressionless face, with large, almond-shaped eyes and a small mouth. The sculpture is displayed in a glass enclosure, with a dark background that contrasts with the lighter materials of the head and pedestal.

Title

Bear Mother

Artist

Bill Reid

Year

1991

Medium

Plaster on marble pedestal

Collection

SFU Art Collection

Donor

Gift of Allan and Faigie Waisman

Year Acquired

2002

Bear Mother is drawn from another sculpture, The Spirit of Haida Gwaii (1986)—an iconic work Reid commissioned by architect Arthur Erickson for the courtyard of the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. The Vancouver International Airport commissioned a second cast of the work which is permanently installed in the international terminal. The work also appears on the back of the Canadian twenty-dollar bill. Reid’s portrayal of Bear Mother, a Haida woman who becomes the mother of cub children, is depicted with a smooth, human face and stylized fur.

Artists

Haida artist Bill Reid (1920–1998) trained as a jeweler at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute and the London School of Design. After seeing bracelets carved by his great uncle, Charles Edenshaw, Reid became a dedicated student of Haida art and is often cited as the single most important figure in the late twentieth-century renaissance of Haida culture.