July 11, 2003
Arctic college students
strike gold
A group of seven display
golden works of art
CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Several Nunavummiut are
a little bit richer - in talent and in gold - since they successfully completed
the goldsmith program at Arctic College in Iqaluit.
Pootoogook Qiatsuk of Cape
Dorset, Okpik Pitseolak of Kimmirut, Therese Ukaliannuk of Igloolik, Pierre
Koomuk of Arviat, Serapio Ittusardjuat of Igloolik, and Mosha Arnatsiaq, also
of Igloolik, are showing their golden works at Nunavut's legislative assembly
building.
Artist
and drum dancer Serapio Ittusardjuat performs during the opening of Nunavut
Arctic College's goldsmithing exhibit at the legislative building last Friday.
(PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE PETRIE)
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Smooth, glistening images
of drum dancers, dogsled teams, beluga whales, birds and harpoon heads lie under
glass, tantalizing the eager spender.
A small group of onlookers
have gathered for the official opening, after catching a brief glimpse of the
shiny objects before the speeches began.
Beth Biggs, senior instructor
of fine arts and crafts, expressed her excitement over the college's first goldsmith
program, and challenged Tiffany's, the upscale American fine accessories shop,
to carry a line of her students' work.
"Gold has been used
by humans for the last 7,000 years, and now Inuit images have been created permanently
in gold," Biggs said.
The artists range in age
from 26 to 63. Their backgrounds tell different stories, yet their jewelry displays
a common love of beauty.
Arnatsiaq is the youngest.
He first became interested in art while doing lino cuts and motion drawings
in school. At 10, he also began helping his father, Maurice Arnatsiaq, sand
ivory carvings.
Ukaliannuk, 63, has nine
children, 21 grandchildren and several great-grand children. She began carving
soapstone and ivory, beadwork and sewing caribou skins long before she took
her first jewelry and metalwork course in Igloolik in 1992.
At the age of eight, Ittusardjuat,
now 58, began making uqsiit and sannirujait out of ivory and caribou antler
for dog team users.
Pitseolak has been carving
various kinds of stone since 1960. She believes that it is important that legends
be told, and she started telling them when she was a little girl, helping to
polish her father's carvings.
Qiatsuk was also drawn
in by his father's work. For Qiatsuk, who studied printmaking for eight years
at the West Baffin Eskimo Co-op in Cape Dorset, ancient masks are an inspiration,
because they reflect the Inuit tradition of tattooing one's face and body parts.
Koomuk prefers the imagery
of animals to ancient masks, because animals are the only source of food when
out hunting. With his lively animal images, he fashions jewelry, bowls and containers.
The gold used by the seven
artist came from Nunavut's Lupin mine. The pieces will be on display until Aug.
6.
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