Figure 1 Publishing

Art + Design / Indigenous Art + Culture / New Releases

7IDANsuu
James Hart

A Monumental Practice

By 7IDANsuu James Hart and Curtis Collins
Foreword by Michael Audain
Texts by Wade Davis and Gwaliga Hart
Published in collaboration with the Audain Art Museum

Ask Haida artist and hereditary chief 7IDANsuu James Hart how long it took him to master the art of carving, and he’ll tell you: “Around ten thousand years.”

Buy Book

“James Hart has developed a visual language that reaches back from Haida time immemorial to a cosmopolitan twenty-first century on the Northwest Coast.”

—Curtis Collins, Director and Chief Curator of the Audain Art Museum

Green-painted carved figure of a human with feathered headdress, holding a circular object in one hand and raising the other in a gesture, by Jim Hart.
Close-up of the right side of Jim Hart’s carved cedar panel, showing intricate Haida designs, human and animal forms, and turquoise-painted salmon.

Book Description

Hart has achieved national prominence and international acclaim for his towering poles, stately cedar sculptures, and massive bronzes—monumental works that extend the long continuum of Haida visual traditions into powerful new forms. Since his early days assisting Robert Davidson and Bill Reid, through his reproductions of historical Haida poles and his carving of original house front, story, and memorial poles for private commissions and clan-based contexts in Haida Gwaii and beyond, he has developed an innovative practice rooted in tradition, and widely celebrated: thousands of people gathered to witness the raising and activation of his Reconciliation Pole; his Three Watchmen bronzes overlook the Audain Art Museum, National Gallery of Canada and the Plains of Abraham; and The Dance Screen (The Scream Too) in Whistler is considered a once-in-a-generation sculptural masterpiece.

This, the first publication devoted to Hart, is both a survey of his major career achievements and a document of an impossible-to-assemble exhibition. Alongside hundreds of photos of nineteen monumental works and associated smaller carvings and bronzes scattered across North America and Europe, and drawing on over two years of interviews with the artist, Curtis Collins illustrates how key animal and supernatural figures reappear across scales and mediums, from jewellery to sixty-foot poles (the “backbone” of his practice), and speaks to the associated activation ceremonies as integral to Haida monumental art. Wade Davis considers Hart’s expressions of Haida resilience within the people’s long history, from time immemorial to the nation’s present-day efforts towards national sovereignty; Gwaliga Hart offers a personal perspective on his father’s work; and in an autobiographical essay the artist himself reflects on his life, and his life’s work.

 

Contributors:

  • Gwaliga Hart
  • Wade Davis
  • Michael Audain (foreword)

Author

Upcoming Events

Book Launch at Audain Art Museum
Thursday, October 30, 2025, 6:00–8:00 PM
Audain Art Museum, Whistler

 

Book Launch at Bill Reid Gallery
Saturday, November 1, 2025, 1:00–3:00 PM
Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art, Vancouver

BOOK DETAILS

  • Hardcover
  • 10.25 × 11.25 inches
  • 248 pages
  • 978-1-77327-227-6
  • $60.00 CDN / $50.00 USD
  • October 2025