June 23, 2006
New Brunswick's Inuk
artist-in-exile
Alec Lawson Tuckatuck
won't let geography get in the way of a family carving legacy
JANE
GEORGE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
New
Brunswick carver Alec Lawson Tuckatuck, 30, uses a rental storage unit outfitted
with the tools of his trade. (PHOTOS COURTESY OF ALEC LAWSON TUCKATUCK)
|
Smooth, sculpted lines
in alabaster that catch the essence of a beluga's shape are typical of carvings
by Alec Lawson Tuckatuck, 30.
Alec is an Inuit carver
who works with the added challenge of not living in the Arctic.
He works out of a concrete-floored
rental storage unit - the kind that mobile southerners lease to store their
belongings - near his home in Fredericton, New Brunswick.
Like his fellow Inuit carvers
in the North, Alec's workshop is equipped with a variety of power tools and
strewn pieces of antler, ivory and stone. But Alec says he has a tough time
getting good stone to work with in the South.
Carving is in Alec's blood:
his great aunt and uncle were the late Lucy and Noah Meeko and his late grandfather,
Sarowilly Ammittu, and his late great-uncle, Davidialuk Ammittu, are also renowned
artists from Nunavik.
"I had a passion to
pursue this. This is what I want to do. To even think about working for someone
else, it doesn't appeal to me anymore," Alec says.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
"My
artwork is a means of cultural affirmation, it allows me to express what we
need to keep and remember, what we need to preserve and practice, what is important
to our culture and what people need to see," Alec says on his web site.
|
Originally from Kuujjuaraapik,
Alec sells to galleries in Canada and in the United States, on consignment and
through his web site.
Alec's main market is on
the internet at www.inuitstonecarving.com, where visitors can see his pieces,
which depict animals and the Inuit way of life.
"The web site is almost
like a portfolio. Now, you can just pull out your business card and say 'hey,
have a look if you're interested,'" Alec says.
There have been more than
165,000 hits on his web site, and, through the site, Alec has built an email
list of more than 200 addresses. When he finishes a piece, he first emails a
picture of it to these potential clients.
And this way of doing business
is working: Alec says he's making money - in one month alone he earned $14,000
due to a big sale.
"My sales are really
picking up," he says.
Alec says he usually spends
about a week or two on each piece, and works only on one piece at a time.
And although he's far away
from the North, Alec says his inspiration still comes from the land and a desire
to preserve traditions.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Alec
uses his web site to promote his carvings, which are characterized by smooth
lines and material such as alabaster or marble)
|
"My artwork is a means
of cultural affirmation, it allows me to express what we need to keep and remember,
what we need to preserve and practice, what is important to our culture and
what people need to see," he says on his web site.
Alec was born in Fort George
(now the community of Chisasibi) on March 14, 1976 and raised in Kuujjuaraapik.
He started watching his
grandfather, Sarowilly, carve when he was very young.
"My grandfather was
always carving. He would be in the shack, and I would always be around him.
I'd observe him, and, after a while, he started to give me a stone to play with.
He would always tell me to imagine the animals in the stone," Alec says.
Alec's first work, carved
at age seven, was of a seal lying down on its side. He says he still has it.
After his grandfather died,
the young Alec continued to watch and observed his sauniq, Alec Tucktatuck,
carving, and would often work beside him making his own carvings. Alec's mother,
Louisa Tuckatuck, is also an artist, specializing in wall hangings.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Alec,
the son of Kuujjuaraapik artist Louisa Tuckatuck and long-time northern teacher
Peter MacDonald, comes from a family noted for its many artists.
|
Alec continued carving
as a child until his family moved to Chatham, New Brunswick when he was 11.
Without the tools or materials he had access to in Kuujjuaraapik, he stopped
carving.
Alec, whose father is long-time
northern teacher Peter Macdonald, became involved in other activities, such
as hockey and baseball. He played junior hockey at a Tier 2 level for an all-native
hockey team in Saskatchewan called the Lebret Eagles.
After graduating from high
school in Chatham, Alec went on to the University of New Brunswick, where he
graduated with a Bachelor of Physical Education degree.
Alec was finally able to
return to Nunavik after completing his degree. In 2000 he moved to Kuujjuaq,
where he was able to get back to his roots.
"I thought I would
like to start carving again," Alec says. "When I started carving again,
I really, really enjoyed it."
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
"Brother
Moon, Sister Sun" made from black soapstone, Brazilian soapstone, alabaster,
caribou antler, and moose antler is a carving based on an Inuit legend of how
the sun and moon were created.
|
Alec says he hopes sometime
to return north when his girlfriend, who has been ill, recovers completely.
"As soon as it gets
possible, we'll be there," he says.
Meanwhile, Alec says he's
never short of ideas for his carvings.
"The stone tells me
what to do," he says. "Even when I have an idea, it's ultimately the
stone which is going to dictate exactly what it wants to be. It never fails."
|