Church in Yuquot Village (Indian Church)

Church in Yuquot Village (Indian Church)

Emily Carr

1929
What do these forests make you feel? Their weight and density, their crowded orderliness. There is scarcely room for another tree and yet there is space around each.
Emily Carr, Opposite Contraries

This is Emily Carr’s Church in Yuquot Village. Painted in 1929, it is her most reproduced piece. One that continues to be talked about today.

Emily Carr is one of Canada’s most celebrated artists. A devoted creator, drawn to nature, and a great adventurer. She was definitely not your typical Victorian woman.

While her subjects and styles changed throughout her career, the majority of her work focused on west coast Indigenous cultures.

Portrait of the artist Emily Carr
Emily Carr in 1908
Church at Yuquot Village (Indian Church)

This painting was a turning point in Carr’s artistic career. Much of her previous work was ignored by the art world and she had all but given up. But a meeting with The Group of Seven reignited her creativity.

This is one of the pieces from that time. Like much of her work, it dives into themes of God in nature, colonialism and a deep connection with Indigenous communities.

What do you see first?

There’s often more to art than meets the eye.
Join us as we dig into this piece and get to know the story behind the story.

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