May 9, 2003
Art for the masses
Festival brings talented
Nunavummiut to share their skills
PATRICIA D'SOUZA
Nunatsiaq News
Ame
Papatsie of Pangnirtung draws images in fine black ink. His easy grin and introspective
drawings attracted many observers during demonstrations. (PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN
MURPHY)
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There's a faint sound coming from the white canvas tent set up in front of
the Nunavut Arctic College residence in Iqaluit. Inside, a carver kneels on
the ground sanding a piece of soapstone.
Actually, there are carvers scattered around the entrance and even under the
building. This is definitely the place.
About 70 artists and instructors have gathered in Iqaluit for the Nunavut Arts
Festival May 2 to 9. This year's festival is the fourth annual event hosted
by the Nunavut Arts and Crafts Association, a non-profit society of artists.
The event gives artists from across Nunavut the opportunity to sell their work,
interact with other artists and attend workshops on marketing or exporting to
the United States.
But it also gives artists the opportunity to draw the public into their work.
Instead of simply interpreting meaning from an image or sculpture, members of
the public and even other artists have had the chance this week to become part
of the process to learn the mysteries of making fish-skin dolls and spinning
muskox underfur.
On Sunday, a handful of kids made caribou bone pendants with the help of Karen
Yip a jewelry from Baker Lake. The kids, from knee-high to tall as any grown
up, sanded the round bone discs, and hammered a design onto a metal plate that
Yip riveted to the face of the disc.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Karen Yip finishes
off a bone pendant for an anxious workshop participant.
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The hammering was definitely the part that appealed to the kids, who pounded
away with abandon. They were less interested in the detail work, and prattled
on about kid stuff as Yip drilled tiny holes in the material. But they still
watched intently as the pendants came to life.
On Tuesday, Thomas Iksiraq of Baker Lake led two artists in a demonstration
of woodblock printing.
Diane Boudreau of Yellowknife usually paints insects, but traded in her paintbrush
for a sharp knife to carve one into a dinner plate-sized piece of plywood.
Saroomie Manik of Resolute Bay spends her time either knitting, crocheting,
beading, tufting, carving, painting, sewing or minding her children. She drew
a detailed image of her hand onto her plywood block.
"Nobody likes mosquitos," Boudreau said, sliding her wood-cutting
tool along her pencil lines.
"They have too many legs," she added, giving her hand a rest.
"I ate them when I was a kid," Manik said with a smile. "They're
sweet."
On Wednesday, NACA members were to attend the organization's annual general
meeting and vote for new regional board members.
And on Friday, it was back home, until next year, when there will be a different
array of skills to learn.
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