Chee Chee has been mentioned in Canada's Parliament &
House of Commons by Indigenous Cree MP
Robert-Falcon Ouellette in a tribute to the artist about his influence. Ouellette said "Let us also recognize one of the finest artists of Canada, Benjamin Chee Chee. He always refused to be an indigenous artist; he was a proud
Anishnabeg. He drew simple lines, usually acrylic on paper. Highly influential in his time, he said he did not paint the past but the present, the living of today. We can see his works, like the flock of four geese. They represent the four directions of the unborn, the youth, the adults and the elders all moving in the same direction. Even though he died in tragedy and is buried in Ottawa, far from his land and people, he still inspires today." In 1983, upon their acquisition of a large collection of the artist's work for their new gallery, the Thunder Bay Nation and Exhibition and Centre for Indian Art organized his first
retrospective. The show received a grant of $97,200 from the Government of Canada to travel to communities throughout Northern Ontario over the next three years. There is a park named after him (Benjamin Chee Chee Park) in Milton, Ontario. == References ==