Nancy Oakley is a Mi'kmaq/Wampanoag Artist creating culturally significant smoke-fired pieces and traditional pottery

Through softly curved pottery forms created by hand and on the wheel, Nancy creates pieces that imbue her spiritual and traditional knowledge and honour her role as a mother.

Nancy E. Oakley is a Mi’kmaq/Wampanoag artist. She was raised in Mashpee Massachuttes and is now living and working on the Eskasoni First Nation reserve in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.

Nancy is a graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where she studied Photography and Pottery. After graduating she then moved to Nova Scotia and studied for a year at the Nova Scotia School of Art and Design, taking courses in Photography, Ceramics, Weaving and Jewelry Making, before leaving to start her family. She is now a mother of 6 and grandmother of 4.

Her process is a collaboration with the land. Clay is harvested from mother earth and shaped by hand. Pieces are stone polished and smoke-fired outdoors with fir tips, seaweed and sawdust, imprinting beautiful smokey finishes. Her pots are then adorned with traditional Mi’kmaq embellishments such as black ash basketry, beadwork, carved and or painted hieroglyphics and braided sweetgrass. Nancy’s work can be seen at stores across Nova Scotia and Massachuttes and has had her work shown in several galleries across Canada.