Wilson, Derek (1950 - 2011)

Culture/Community

Haisla

Biography

Derek Wilson was from the Killerwhale clan of the Haisla (Xanaksiyala) Nation. He was a Hereditary Chief, and largely a self-taught artist. He worked in wood, silver, gold, copper, ivory, gemstones, and silkscreen. Derek first began to carve at age eleven with his uncle, Henry Robertson. Beginning in the late 1950s, Derek and his brother, Barry, would finish off the pieces that Henry would discard. Encouraged by David Gladstone and Russell Smith, Derek started to work with gold and silver. His designs were influenced by his Tsimshian and Haisla background. In 1981, the Queen of England received a gold ring from Derek as a representative gift from the visiting First Nations. From 2004 to 2006, Derek helped Henry Robertson oversee the recreation of the nineteenth-century G’psgolox pole that was made for the country of Sweden as part of a repatriation deal between Sweden and Canada. He was also featured in the NFB documentary Totem: The Return of the G’psgolox Pole. In 2008, Derek helped teach the students of Vancouver’s Northwest Coast Jewellery Arts Program. [Information from Lattimer Gallery website.]