Native Art Gallery
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Native Art Gallery
Dedicated to the promotion and sale of artwork created by Canada's indigenous peoples, Native Art Gallery has been a staple of picturesque downtown Oakville since it opened in 1995. The gallery now exists down the street in a contemporary gallery space in the historic Towne Square.

Under new ownership and with a rejuvenated vision for the gallery, Native Art Gallery strives to connect local and international clients with authentic Canadian sculpture, prints, wall hangings and more produced by Inuit and First Nations' artists.We believe that indigenous Canadian art inherently conveys the natural wonder and rich history of Canada through the beauty of the animals, spirits and legends represented through their work.
Services
Native art makes an elegant and significant corporate gift, demonstrating not only an appreciation of art but also in the rich tradition of native Canadian art. In addition to Inuit and First Nations artwork, we offer beautiful lead free pewter corporate items such as pins, letter openers and business card holders each crafted in Vancouver by Canadian artisans.
The Six Nations of the Grand River Territory is the largest First Nation in Canada, and comprises the six Iroquois nations (Mohawk, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Seneca and Tuscarora) that make up the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee Confederacy who live in this one territory outside of Brantford, Ontario. The Grand River is one of the cleanest rivers in Ontario and achieved Canadian Heritage River status in 1994.
Baker Lake (or Qamani'tuuq in Inuktitut, meaning "where the river widens") is Nunavut's only inland community. Located close to the geographic center of Canada, Baker Lake is situated at the mouth of the Thelon River in the Kivalliq region. It is a prominent arts and crafts community today.

Artists and studios such as the Inuit Heritage Centre, the Jessie Oonark Centre, and well-established independent galleries are assets to the community's arts and crafts industry, which developed in the late 1960s when many artists settled in the area.Baker Lake sculptors prefer large carvings of hunters and animals t hat often emphasize the relationship between animal and human, and are made of hard Keewatin stone.
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