A tale of history and humanization unfold in colourful 'Haida Manga'
On a ship with torn sails, tossed by churning waters, the first of many Europeans needing rescue arrives along the coast of what is now British Columbia, before a Haida canoe brings an outstretched paddle and the warm light of salvation.
So begins the latest book of "Haida Manga" by artist and author Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, as he reaches into the history of his own family and of colonization in a work that blends Indigenous artistic influences with Japanese manga comic-book story telling.
The colourful watercolour panels of "JAJ: a Haida Manga" leap off the page as they draw the audience inside the world-spanning story.
Released in May, the book traces the journeys of both Yahgulanaas's ancestors and the eponymous Norwegian mariner Johan Adrian Jacobsen, who visited Haida Gwaii in 1882 in search of cultural items for a German museum during a time of escalating colonial violence against Indigenous Peoples.
Yahgulanaas -- whose works are in institutions including the British Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art and Vancouver Art Gallery -- said the story represents an invitation to humanize each other and forge a path toward a better future.
He said he found himself empathizing with Jacobsen, a young man who was "promised much and given little" by those who hired him.
"I discovered that, like myself, he comes from a small fishing village. His family would harvest seabird eggs for sale and eating, and I've done the same," he said.
The artist's mission is to create artwork that "allows people who don't know us to see us as humans," which he said hasn't been the case for Indigenous Peoples and people of colourthrough colonization, and to a significant degree still isn't.
"I thought, if people could see the 'other,' whoever the other is, as a son or a daughter, that would go a long way to humanizing and alleviating the violence."
The panel style of "JAJ" is common to Japanese Manga and graphic novels, but instead of rigid boxes, Yahgulanaas's story inhabits window-like spaces opened by a sinuous black line ebbing and flowing through the pages.
Unfold the dust cover and a surprise is revealed -- the book's 108 pages combine to form a single mural. The black line delineating the panels expands and contracts symmetrically across the mural, forming the image of a creature that recalls an old Haida weaving design.
It's a style Yahgulanaas has employed in previous Haida Manga works.
The original "JAJ" mural, four metres in length, now hangs in the Humboldt Forum, a museum in Berlin whose representatives approached Yahgulanaas to see if he was interested in creating a piece of artwork reflecting on Jacobsen's story.
Also on display at the German museum is the Haida totem pole that Jacobsen brought back with him.
Yahgulanaas's work is at once playful, mischievous and serious; he depicts an encounter between Jacobson and one of his real-life ancestors, George, as a key part of the narrative.
Some encounters like this are imagined, but real historical figures play an active role in the story, overseeing the spread of smallpox that devastated Indigenous communities.
While doing research for "JAJ," Yahgulanaas said he discovered that ancestors on his father's side came from the same part of Norway as Jacobsen, making the story even more personal.
"It became more important to humanize all the characters," Yahgulanaas said.
Jacobsen went to Berlin to try to establish a career, improve his circumstances and start a family, and Yahgulanaas said he moved to Vancouver with similar desires.
Yahgulanaas comes from Masset, on the northern tip of Haida Gwaii, where artwork has long been an economic driver.
He said that artwork has tended toward the "monumental," often ending up in privileged places like grand institutions and private collections.
That bothered Yahgulanaas.
"We reduce ourselves as individuals. We make ourselves small in the presence of that which is grand and great," he said.
The scale of Yahgulanaas's murals preserves a sense of grandeur, but transforming them into books makes them accessible and engaging.
"A book can live in your hand. You can flip the page forwards and backwards. You are in control of the flow of the story it is subject to your interpretation."
Comic books and graphic storytelling can also span barriers of ethnicity, class, language and education, Yahgulanaas said.
The artist said "JAJ" is an invitation to start a conversation, and forge new relationships that put an end to violence.
"It's the Haida belief that if you make friends first, if you establish the human relationship first, then those difficult questions can be resolved much easier."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 9, 2023.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canadian team told Trump's tariffs unavoidable right now, but solutions on the table in surprise Mar-a-Lago meeting
During a surprise dinner at Mar-a-Lago, representatives of the federal government were told U.S. tariffs from the incoming Donald Trump administration cannot be avoided in the immediate term, two government sources tell CTV News.
Pedestrian killed by Via Rail train near Kingston, Ont.
Regular rail traffic has resumed with severe delays.
Muskoka reacts to major snowfall, hundreds stuck on Highway 11
From road closures, power outages, weather declarations and nonstop shovelling, Muskoka residents were faced with nearly a metre of persistent snowfall on Saturday.
Saskatoon priest accused of sexual assault says he meant to encourage young girl with hug and kiss
A Saskatoon priest accused of sexual assault says he meant to encourage and reassure a young girl when he hugged and kissed during his testimony at Saskatoon Provincial Court Friday.
Beef prices reach record highs in Canada
The cost of beef continues to rise, reaching record highs on grocery store shelves ahead of the busiest time for many grocers and butchers before the holiday season.
Trump threatens 100% tariff on the BRIC bloc of nations if they act to undermine U.S. dollar
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump on Saturday threatened 100 per cent tariffs against a bloc of nine nations if they act to undermine the U.S. dollar.
Bob Bryar, drummer for rock band My Chemical Romance, dead at 44
Bob Bryar, former drummer for the band My Chemical Romance, has died. He was reportedly 44.
Toronto man accused of posing as surgeon, giving four women injections
A 29-year-old Toronto man has been charged after allegedly posing as a surgeon and providing cosmetic procedures on several women.
'Disappointing': Toronto speed camera cut down less than 24 hours after being reinstalled
A Toronto speed camera notorious for issuing tens of thousands of tickets to drivers has been cut down again less than 24 hours after it was reinstalled.
Local Spotlight
Regina's LED volume wall leaving Sask. months after opening
Less than a year after an LED volume wall was introduced to the film world in Saskatchewan, the equipment is making its exit from the province.
'My dear Carmel': Lost letters returned to 103-year-old Guelph, Ont. woman
A young history buff was able to reunite a Guelph, Ont. woman with letters written by her husband almost 80 years ago.
'We have to do something': Homeless advocates in Moncton reaching out for help over holidays
Twice a week, Joanne and Jeff Jonah fill up their vehicle full of snacks and sandwiches and deliver them to the homeless in downtown Moncton, N.B.
100-year-old Winnipeg man walks blocks to see his wife
It's considered lucky to live to be 100, but often when you hit that milestone, you're faced with significant mobility issues. Not Winnipeg's Jack Mudry. The centenarian regularly walks five blocks to get where he wants to go, the care home where his wife Stella lives.
Video shows B.C. cat bursting through pet door to confront raccoons
Several hungry raccoons were chased off a B.C. couple’s deck this week by one over-confident house cat – who was ultimately lucky to saunter away unscathed.
Trailer Park Boys host Canadian premiere of new movie in Dartmouth
Sunday night was a big night for the Trailer Park Boys, as Ricky, Julian and Bubbles hosted an advanced screening of their new movie in Dartmouth, N.S.
Deer spotted wearing high-visibility safety jacket in Northern B.C.
Andrea Arnold is used to having to slow down to let deer cross the road in her Northern B.C. community. But this weekend she saw something that made her pull over and snap a photo.
From cellphones to dentures: Inside Halifax Transit’s lost and found
Every single item misplaced on a bus or ferry in the Halifax Regional Municipality ends up in a small office at the Halifax Transit Bridge Terminal in Dartmouth, N.S.
Torontonians identify priorities, concerns in new city survey
A new public opinion survey has found that 40 per cent of Torontonians don’t feel safe, while half reported that the quality of life in the city has worsened over the last year.