May 12, 2006
Soapstone carving
fetches record $278,000
"I don't think
anyone expected the amount the piece got"
JOHN
THOMPSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
Migration by the late Puvurnituq artist Joe Talirunili sold for $278,500 at
a Toronto auction on May 1. The 30.5-centimetre soapstone carving is one of
many "Joe boats," but the only known example to contain animals, rather
than people. (PHOTO COURTESY OF WADDINGTON'S)
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A carving by the late Joe
Talirunili, a renowned Puvurnituq artist, sold at auction on May 1 for $278,500,
a price that's believed to set new records for Inuit art.
Talirunili, who died in
1976, made many soapstone carvings in the same theme as the carving that sold
last Monday in Toronto. It's titled The Migration, and known popularly
as one of 25 to 30 "Joe boats."
But while most of Talirunili's
boat carvings portrayed people, this one contains animals: An owl and a dog
or wolf sit at the helm, with eight Arctic hares paddling behind them.
Some say The Migration
works represent a dramatic escape from an ice floe by Talirunili's family when
the artist was a young child. Others say it represents a tragedy when a boat
sank and many adults died, scarring Talirunili.
In any case, the excellent
condition of the carving, the fact that it dates back to an early period of
the artist's career, its uniqueness and "whimsical" character all
added up to something extraordinary, according to Duncan McLean, an Inuit art
specialist at Waddington's auction house where the carving was sold.
What's more, each character
in the boat is so expressive, "you could identify with each one."
"It was a great piece.
It had everything in it you'd want," he said.
This isn't the first time
a Joe boat beat the standing record for the price of Inuit art. In late 2001,
another carving of The Migration sold for $87,500, setting a record for
Inuit carvings at the time.
As for the boat filled
with animals, McLean said he expected the carving to fetch between $70,000 and
$80,000 - $100,000 at the most.
"I don't think anyone
expected the amount the piece got," he said.
McLean predicts that last
week's sale will help drive up the price of other high-end Inuit carvings. "It
sets a new benchmark," he said.
The sale could also help
attract a different kind of art collector - the type who want to spend more
money.
McLean said some collectors
only purchase art that's worth a certain value, such as $40,000. As Inuit art
continues to sell for more money, these high rollers become more interested
in purchasing it themselves, he said.
"It shows development,"
he said.
Before the auction, the
carving sat on the vendor's coffee table for 40 years.
Talirunili was born between
1893 and 1906. He died on Sept. 13, 1976. He helped found the Puvirnituq print
shop.
Talirunili's carvings are
worth far more than when the artist was alive, and the Inuit art market was
still in its infancy.
"It's not so much
because Joe's dead. It's that it's an early piece," McLean said. "It's
the best we've seen him make."
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