June 27, 2003
Hello Dolly
Sanikiluaq artists benefit
from partnership with Pangnirtung fish plant workers
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Sanikiluaq's
fish skin dolls can sell for up to $450. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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The sale of Sanikiluaq's
famous fish skin dolls is expanding after a pilot project with the department
of sustainable development led to an increase in the number of dolls the community
can produce.
In February, Nujuqsivik
artisans in Sanikiluaq received nine kilograms of turbot skins from Pangnirtung.
The community produces about a dozen dolls a year. The limited production stems
from resident's regard for fish skin is a food source, not an art supply.
But this month, five doll-makers
produced 30 dolls using the Pangnirtung fish skins, most of which have already
sold.
DSD allocated $4,000 from
its Fisheries Development and Diversification Fund to purchase and transport
the frozen membranes to Sanikiluaq.
This month, Nujuqsivik
ordered an additional 90 kilograms of skins from Pangnirtung.
The plush figurines have
long been a trademark of the Belcher Island community. The dolls sell for between
$150 and $450 - depending on their size and whether the dolls are framed.
More skins means more dolls
can be produced, said John Jamieson, a Nujuqsivik board member.
The dolls are sold at the
Sanikiluaq Co-op and through word of mouth. However, the market will likely
grow with Jamieson's on-going discussions with galleries in Montreal, Ottawa
and Winnipeg.
"We're getting better
at production so we can lower the price. We're going to be busy this summer,"
Jamieson said.
The idea of using skins
from Pangnirtung came after Wayne Lynch, a sector specialist for DSD, was in
Sanikiluaq. Jamieson mentioned the skin shortage, Lynch called up Pangnirtung's
fish plant, and the rest is history.
The skins are flown to
Sanikiluaq in a frozen state. They are thawed, dried, cut and sewn into dolls.
A core of five women carefully stitch and decorate the figures. Doll-makers
have started using polar bear fur and goose feathers to trim the works of art.
Linking the two communities
made sense, said Carey Bonnell, fisheries manger for DSD.
"It promotes the full
utilization of a fisheries product. A skin that is normally not used, is being
used," he said.
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