Beau Dick: Book-woos (Bukwus) Mask

By: Palmer Jarvis

Lot 225 – Beau Dick (1955-2017), Kwakwaka’wakw
BOOK-WOOS (BUKWUS) MASK, 1991
signed, titled, and dated verso
13.25 x 11 x 6.5 in — 33.7 x 27.9 x 16.5 cm
Estimate $10,000-$15,000

Born in the community of Yalis (Alert Bay), British Columbia, Beau Dick, known as Walas Gwa’yam (Big Whale) is widely acknowledged for his importance as both an artist and activist. His artworks have contributed to the ceremonial life of his community, and have expanded the popular conception of Northwest Coast art and imagery among collectors and fellow artists.

Many of Dick’s creations take on a haunting or otherworldly aspect mediated by the artist’s integration of a colour palette and style incorporating imagery from Japanese and Western pop culture.

The present artwork is inscribed in the interior “Book-woos / Wild Man of the Woods” and depicts the ghost-like Bukwus spirit, a dangerous supernatural being regarded by the Kwakwaka’wakw and neighbouring peoples as a ghostly figure who dwells in the forest amidst the souls of the drowned. Bukwus masks are part of an extended family of wild-man and wild-woman imagery that includes the cannibalistic Dzunukwa spirit, who is sometimes said to be the keeper of lost souls, returning the souls of drowned whalers to their villages during their memorials.

Historical Bukwus masks exhibit many minutely different regional variations that are little understood and inadequately differentiated at the present time. Beau Dick seems to have delighted in his depictions of the many variations. The present mask, with its prow-like curvilinear mouth, shaggy eyebrows, and reddish complexion may be partially informed by a family of Nuu-chah-nulth masks of reddish colour, broadly identified by Detroit Art Institute Curator David Penney as “Red-Faced Wild Man.”[1]

[1] David W. Penney, “The Nootka ‘Wild Man’ Masquerade and the Forest Spirit Tradition of the Southern Northwest Coast.” RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics, no. 1 (1981): 95-109. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20166659.

About the Auction

Our major fall auction of exceptional First Nations art includes important works by Beau Dick, Jimmy John, John Cross, Norval Morrisseau, Alex Janvier, Eddy Cobiness, Allen Sapp, and Benjamin Chee Chee, as well as notable paintings, graphics, and sculpture by Daphne Odjig, Chief Henry Speck Sr., Robert Charles Davidson, William (Bill) Reid, Jacob Ezra Thomas, Randy Stiglitz, Jane Ash Poitras, and others.

Bidding Available November 7 – 20, 2025.

Public Previews

Previews are available at our Toronto gallery:

Thursday, November 13 from 10 am to 5 pm
Friday, November 14 from 10 am to 5 pm
Saturday, November 15 from 12 pm to 4 pm
Sunday, November 16 from 12 pm to 4 pm
Monday, November 17 from 10 am to 7 pm
Tuesday, November 18 from 10 am to 5 pm
Wednesday, November 19 from 9 am to 12 pm
Or by appointment.

You must be registered to bid in this auction. Register here.

Contact us for condition reports and further information.


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