Ken Michael Kirkby - Artist Info

About Ken Michael Kirkby

Name variants

Ken Kirby, Kenneth Ken Michael Kirby, Kenneth Michael Kirkby
  • Biography from the Archives of askART

    Ken Michael Kirkby biographical photo
    Ken Kirkby: Painter. Raconteur. Fly fisher. Environmentalist. Born Sept. 1, 1940, in London, during an air raid; died June 20, 2023, of cancer in Nanoose Bay, Vancouver Island; aged 82.

    I stopped to buy newspapers on the way to Ken’s. That was his only request. He wanted to know what the world was up to, even as he was leaving it. He smiled and put the Times Colonist and The Globe and Mail aside, not trying to stand, he was too weak for that, and apologizing for still being in his bathrobe, late in the afternoon. He managed, however, to tell some tall tales featuring himself. He always had time for that.

    The last time I’d seen Ken Kirkby full of life he was standing on the porch of the small cabin he liked to rent on a B.C. trout lake. It was dawn and he was in his bathrobe, the same one, a coffee balanced on the railing, a small, faint blue cloud of smoke escaping him as he had his first cigarette of the day. He raised one hand, a salute, then swept his arm out toward the lake, still and shining, with trout rising, as if to say, this is all ours. He never rushed to go fishing. He waited until the conditions were just right, and he liked to guide his wife, artist Nana Cook and sometimes his son Michael Kirkby, whom he had with his first wife, Helen Michalchuk.

    In his visits with Michael as a boy, he tried to make up for his absences by teaching him important life lessons: like how to wield a shotgun, pluck a grouse and cast a fly with the delicacy of a brush stroke. He also delighted in taking him for his first cheeseburger, knowing that his ex would not approve of fast food.

    The fish would go home to his smoker. On a cold winter’s day, he would pull out a trout and eat it, drinking from a bottle of homemade red wine, and he and Nana would talk about the day they’d caught that big fish, on the same lake where they were married in June, 2017, standing knee deep, with the wedding officiant gamely wading in with them. They had a glass of champagne after the ceremony and then went fishing, staying out until darkness fell on that long, perfect evening.

    Ken spent his early years in Portugal, where he had his first art show, at age 16, in Lisbon. The praise he won then spurred him to make painting a lifetime career. Later, while he was still a teenager, his family moved to Canada, and he soon started painting big landscapes. As a young man he travelled in the Arctic, and he tried to get its essence, its soul, onto canvas.

    Isumataq, an oil painting nearly four metres high and 46 metres long, took Ken 12 years to complete. Its massive scale was exhibited at Art Expo, in New York, the Museum of Nature, in Ottawa, and a few panels were displayed in Parliament in 1992. During the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, the painting was shown at an ice rink, a venue that Ken said in Canada was like being displayed in a church.

    For 20 years he had a studio near Bowser, on Vancouver Island, just above the high tide mark, in a red barn he reluctantly shared with a family of otters. Any rats that intruded were dispatched with an air rifle. There he mostly painted sweeping West Coast landscapes, the distant blue mountains, the pebbled shores.

    Every few years he would organize an art auction to raise money for environmental causes, putting up dozens of his own paintings and cajoling other artists to donate their work. Once he had an idea, he would spring into action, and those in his circle would be towed in his wake, whether they wanted to be or not.

    Ken did not know how to do nothing, and painted daily, leaving two unfinished canvases on easels in his studio. The lake seemed empty without him, but his friends poured a glass of Portuguese wine into the water as a goodbye toast.

    Mark Hume is Ken Kirkby’s long-time friend.

    Source: Lives Lived, September 25, 2023

    Submitted by Nana Cook, wife of the artist
  • Biography from the Archives of askART

    Ken Michael Kirkby biographical photo
    Ken Kirkby was born on September 1, 1940 in London, England but he was raised in Portugal. As a youth he was always interested in sketching and painting. His first exhibition in Lisbon at age 16 was a success and the show sold out shortly after the opening.

    He moved to Canada with his family in 1958, and spent the next year trying to get to the pristine Arctic which he had learned so much about as a youth. He eventually spent 5 years living among the original Canadian people, the Inuit. The area so inspired him, that he began to do sketches depicting the life he had come to know. He converted many of his drawings of the North to oil paintings to show the world what he had found.

    In 1981 Kirkby began his large canvas painting Isumataq. Twelve feet high by 152 feet long, it became his full time project. The painting, consisting of 38 vertical panels, depicts the raw powerful landscape and the inukshuks and icebergs that define the North. The painting was completed in 1991 and was unveiled in Parliament by then Speaker of the House of Commons, John A. Fraser. In 1993, Kirkby was awarded the Commonwealth Medal for the 125th Anniversary of Canadian Confederation in recognition of his outstanding contribution to Canada.

    Kirkby lives on Vancouver Island and continues to capture on canvas the images that he loves. An avid fisherman, the outdoors continue to provide the inspiration for his paintings.

    His works are found in a number of galleries, corporate and private collections throughout the world.

    Sources include:
    hambletongalleries.com/

    From askART.com:
    Researchers looking for additional information about Inuit art in the askART Glossary will find Glossary entries with these titles: Cape Dorset, Inuit, Inuit Art, Inuit Artists’ Print Database, Inuit Disc Number, Sculpture of the Inuit, Stencil Print, Stonecut Print, Syllabics, and Winnipeg Art Gallery.

    Glossary URL is http://www.askart.com/AskART/lists/Art_Definition.aspx
  • Biography from the Archives of askART

    Ken Michael Kirkby biographical photo
    Ken Kirkby (1940-)

    Born in London and raised in Portugal, Ken Kirkby arrived in Western Canada in 1958, to spend 5 years walking from Alaska to Baffin Island. His work, which has focused on the Canadian North, and which includes Isumutaq, a 152' mural of the north, has been exhibited in Canada, the US and Europe and is found in many public and private collections around the world. Kirkby was awarded the Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of Canadian Confederation by the Governor General in recognition for his significant contribution to Canada.

    Through his artwork, Ken has rediscovered and exalted the ancient aboriginal stone symbols known as "inukshuks" ("in the shape of man"). Set amidst the changing visages of the climate, earth and sky of the vast and often desolate Arctic landscape, they stand as mute symbols of lost time and forgotten presence. Kirkby captures the mystic grandeur of these creations that bestow upon the surroundings a silence and haunting solitude.

    Ken Kirkby: A Painter's Quest for Canada, a biography by Goody Nios

    "Ken Kirkby is a Canadian original. As passionate about life as he is about art, his is an amazing story about a man whose creative soul was shaped by the Arctic barrens and who has spent much of his life capturing that fierce beauty on canvas. Now living in a sea side cottage on Vancouver Island, where he shares his studio with a roving family of otters, he has turned his eye to the windswept landscape of the West Coast for inspiration. An outspoken champion of conservation, he uses his art both to reflect and preserve the natural beauty of the world."
    - Mark Hume, author of River of the Angry Moon, and National Correspondent for The Globe and Mail

    Information provided by Sal Kahil, Vancouver BC, Canada

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