Ursula Johnson

Individual


Roles

Artist

Biography

Ursula Johnson is a member of the Eskasoni Mi’kmaw Nation on Cape Breton Island (Unama’ki in Mi’kmaw) and grew up speaking Mi’kmaw at home. Her family, including her great-grandmother, renowned basket maker Caroline Gould (1919–2011), is well known as cultural leaders in their community. Johnson spent her early working life as an activist and was a participant in the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the United Nations, where she was involved in creating that institution’s first Indigenous Youth Caucus. However, she felt art could further her social and cultural goals and she decided to pursue art studies in Halifax; since then, she has made Halifax her home. She graduated from NSCAD University in 2006.

Johnson’s work blends sculpture, performance, and activism, and much of it is based in her understanding of the concept Netukulimk, which, she says, “is self-sustainability through responsibility, the impacts of harvesting, or the art market, or resources with naturally made objects or Indigenous objects." Johnson was a recipient of a REVEAL Indigenous Art Award from the Hnatyshyn Foundation in the spring of 2017, and in the fall of that year she won the $50,000 Sobey Art Award, the most prestigious award for contemporary art in Canada. She was the first Atlantic Canadian to have done so. Johnson’s work Moose Fence, 2017, won the 2019 Nova Scotia Masterworks Award and was acquired by the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in 2021.

Adapted from Art Canada Institute, 2022

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