The lawsuit introduced by a British Columbia man towards the property of the First Nations artist Norval Morrisseau (1932-2007) alleging he was sexually assaulted by the painter has been dismissed. The dismissal order says the case was dismissed “for all functions” and with out prices to any get together. It was signed by the plaintiff Mark Anthony Jacobson and Jason Gratl, the lawyer representing Morrisseau’s property, and filed within the BC Supreme Courtroom in Vancouver on 6 January.
“This case proceeded to a fast and decisive decision,” Gratl tells The Artwork Newspaper. “We cross-examined the plaintiff on the substance of his allegations, after which his lawyer withdrew, and the plaintiff consented to the dismissal of his declare with none fee to him.”
Within the lawsuit filed final 12 months, Jacobson sought C$5m ($3.6m) from the property typically, aggravated and punitive damages. He alleged Morrisseau reached into his pants and touched him on the buttocks after Morrisseau’s assistant steered he might heal Jacobson’s again ache.
The property responded to the lawsuit saying that Morrisseau “was in no place to be bodily or socially aggressive” on the time of the alleged 2006 assault, that he “had no libido”, was held upright in a wheelchair by straps and was within the superior levels of Parkinson’s illness. Morrisseau died the next 12 months on the age of 75.
In an affidavit filed final September, Jacobson acknowledged that Morrisseau suffered from Parkinson’s illness, however claimed he was “nonetheless ready to make use of his arms and palms in 2006, with help”.
Morrisseau is taken into account the founding father of the Woodlands Faculty of Artwork, which drew on conventional Native cosmology. Dubbed “the Picasso of the North” by Marc Chagall, Morrisseau made work that spoke to the cultural and political tensions between Indigenous and settler traditions, and likewise celebrated fluidity, each cultural and sexual. The artist’s later work embraced up to date idioms, paving the way in which for painters reminiscent of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, who merged Indigenous cosmology with Surrealism.
Jacobson was a fan of Morrisseau, whom he met by likelihood in a Nanaimo gallery in 2005. In court docket paperwork, the property claimed that Jacobson, who can also be an artist, paints within the type of Morrisseau “and to some extent has additionally common his creative persona after Norval Morrisseau, naming himself ‘Rainbow Thunderbird’ after Morisseau’s Anishnaabek title ‘Copper Thunderbird’”.
Morrisseau’s property said in its response to the lawsuit, filed final 9 September, that Jacobson had contacted Cory Dingle, the chief govt of the corporate related to the property, in 2022 and requested to be promoted as Morrisseau’s “sole non secular and creative successor”. In a subsequent affidavit, Dingle said that he refused and the following day Jacobson allegedly started a “vile and profane textual content message and web defamation marketing campaign” towards Morrisseau and the property.
Jacobson said that he “categorically denies” that he requested to be appointed as “non secular successor or gatekeeper of the Woodlands type”.
Dingle tells The Artwork Newspaper he feels relieved and vindicated by the dismissal of the case. “The property will at all times vigorously defend the legacy of Norval Morrisseau towards all actions making an attempt to decrease his significance,” he says. “As we’ve seen with the latest crown convictions of all six fraud circumstances now efficiently concluded with responsible on all accounts, these victories present the world our ardour to defend Morrisseau’s legacy.”
Morrisseau grew to become conscious of forgeries of his work in the marketplace within the years earlier than his dying. However it was a 2019 documentary by the Canadian film-maker Jamie Kastner, There Are No Fakes, that introduced what has been described as the largest artwork fraud in historical past to wider public consideration.
