| DESCRIPTION: Rare pictorial map of the Hood Canal Area in Washington State by artist Esko Rentola.  Rentola was closely associated with the Quilette Indian tribe and this map reflects this attachment. 
 Other maps by Rentola produced between 1957 and 1964 include Camano Island (1957), Forks Washington and Vicinity, West End Washington, and Grayland, North Cove, Tokeland, all approximately 13.5" x 17" in size.
 
 Rare. None of Esko Rentola's maps, including this one, are referenced in WorldCat and only no reference to this map is found online. Dated to 1957 by comparison to the Camano Island map (online) with a similar float-line border and address.
 
 
 Esko Kain Rentola(1921 - 2009)
 Esko Rentola was born amidst the Depression in Aberdeen, Washington to a family of Finnish ancestry. The early stages of Esko's life were set against the picturesque backdrop of a beach cottage on the Quinault Indian land, and later, a small farm in Grayland.  Using the GI Bill, he earned an MFA from Washington State University.  WorldCat contains a reference to his 1948 college thesis- " A report on a thesis consisting of cartoons which interpret various theories of humor. Esko further honed his craft at the Academy of Advertising Art in San Francisco.
 
 After graduation "he got jobs painting signs and did drawings and editorial cartoons for the Renton Chronicle and the Aberdeen Daily World. He taught courses at colleges, once as far away as the Bowling Green branch of the University of Ohio. And, he started drawing detailed maps."
 
 While art remained Esko's passion, he began to preach.  He was known for his unique pulpit style, sketching illustrations while delivering sermons, mainly in Finnish churches. Despite his growing reputation as an evangelist, Esko viewed himself as an artist first. However, when an opportunity arose to serve as the minister of the Assembly of God Church in La Push, Washington Esko and his wife, along with their young son David, embraced the new chapter. At his inaugural sermon, the Quileute community named him “Bayak” (Raven in Quileute), a name he wore with pride. Raven, a significant figure in Quileute mythology, became a title synonymous with Esko.
 
 Following years of service in La Push, the Rentola family returned to their Maple Valley home. In the early 1980s, Bayak returned to La Push, starting one of the many Quileute village newsletters, chronicling the community's stories.
 
 Adapted from The Talking Raven. Vol 12. No. 10. December, 2017.  Online.
 PUBLICATION DATE: 1947GEOGRAPHIC AREA: United StatesBODY OF WATER: CONDITION: Good.
                        Intact.  Clean. Washed.  Flattened.  Bottom right corner with old tape repair (transluscent) which has partially obscured a small area at bottom right.COLORING: Process color.ENGRAVER: SIZE: 
                                            " x
                       " ITEM PHYSICAL LOCATION: PRICE: $700ADD TO CART  |