Wabanaki Modern tells the story of how, in the early 1960s, a modernist movement—unlike any other—took hold for a brief but powerful eight years in New Brunswick. In Elsipogtog, the province’s largest First Nations reserve, the Micmac Indian Craftsmen (MIC) collective rose to national prominence and forever changed the landscape of modern Indigenous art in Atlantic Canada.

    Inspired by stories of the Wabanaki—ancestors of present-day Indigenous Peoples including the Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi’kmaq, Passamaquoddy, and Penobscot Nations—the collective’s trailblazing work was included at Expo 67 and it grabbed national headlines. Led by artists Michael Francis and Stephen Dedham, the visual language of MIC fused modern geometric abstraction with traditional Wabanaki heritage to create eclectic, often minimalist, and unabashedly contemporary works.



    By 1966, however, the withdrawal of government support compromised the resources of MIC, and its production ceased by 1970. Its work faded from memory for decades until 2022, when the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and Goose Lane Editions published a trilingual edition of the book to coincide with an exhibition of the same name spotlighting the collective’s groundbreaking work, which paved the way for future generations of Indigenous artists to follow. The ACI web version of the book is produced under license from Goose Lane Editions.



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    © XXXX Art Canada Institute.

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    ISBN XXX-X-XXXX-XXXX-X

    Published in Canada

    Art Canada Institute

    Massey College, University of Toronto

    4 Devonshire Place
    Toronto, ON M5S 2E1


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    About the Authors:

    Emma Hassencahl-Perley

    Emma Hassencahl-Perley is Curator of Indigenous Art at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and a Wolastoqey visual artist, arts writer, and educator from Neqotkuk (Tobique First Nation) in New Brunswick. She has curated and co-curated numerous exhibitions, including ehpituwikuwam (2022), BACA: Creation Stories (2023), and Epekwitk Quill Sisters: Etleoogoeiog (Talking Together) (2024).

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    Photograph of Emma Hassencahl-Perley

    John Leroux

    John Leroux is director of the Marion McCain Institute for Atlantic Canadian Art at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery. He has worked at award-winning architecture firms in Toronto, Atlanta, Saint John, and Fredericton, and has taught at the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design, the University of New Brunswick, and St. Thomas University. Leroux has authored twenty-one books on architecture and visual culture.

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    Photograph of John Leroux

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