February 8, 2002
Kimmirut artists compete
in Ottawa snow sculpture competition
Team brings Inuit legend
of Luumajuq to life to celebrate Winterlude
MIRIAM
HILL
Donny Pitsiulak and his
teammates will be sculpting in a different medium than they are used to this
week. Instead of soapstone, marble, or serpentine, Team Nunavut has been sharpening
its chisels and knives in anticipation of the Canada Snow Sculpture Competition
being held during Ottawas Winterlude celebrations.
Full-time artists Ooloopie
Killiktee and Eyesiak Pudloo, also from Kimmirut, will join Pitsiulak in creating
a sculpture out of a giant block of snow. The blocks sitting in front of City
Hall measure 3.7 metres (12 feet) wide, 3.7 metres deep and 4.3 metres (16 feet)
high.
The event, part of Ottawas
annual winter festival, brings 13 teams from across the country to create works
based on the theme "Our Mythological World." About 400,000 visitors
are expected see the snow sculptures.
Team captain Pitsiulak,
speaking hours before hopping on a plane to start his journey South, said a
jury in Ottawa who liked their proposal picked the Kimmirut team from others
in Nunavut.
The sculpture will be based
on the Inuit legend of Luumajuq the myth of a woman transformed into
a white whale.
"I chose this story
because it will look good down there and its a long-time story and it
really happened, too," he said. "Were going to make a woman
with an amauti dragged by a whale and the whole story will be written on the
side, too."
The teams worked for 38
hours between Feb. 5 and 8 to finish their works before the official awards
ceremony Feb. 10.
"We have to see the
ice first. Its like soapstone, we have to see the soapstone first,"
Pitsiulak said of his teams game plan. "We just talk about it and
we just have to work together. We talk about the picture first and then put
it into the snow."
This is Pitsiulaks
second year at Winterlude and he said he choose the other two team members because
hes worked with them in Kimmirut before.
"And I know they wake
up early in the morning, too, thats the most important thing," he
said laughing.
Last year Mother Nature
wreaked havoc with the sculpture competition. "It got windy and rainy and
they all melted down," he said. "When we only had three more hours,
it melted."
This year there were fears
the weather would again be too mild for a proper winter celebration, but a late
cold snap saw the citys Rideau canal finally open to skaters last weekend
and promises of continuing low temperatures have sculptors and event organizers
keeping their fingers crossed.
Pitsiulak did learn one
thing from last years event, though: putting salt on the roads is hard
on sculptors clothes.
"Too much salt on
the road so all our clothes got white," he said chuckling.
He also said there is a
marked difference between snow in Ottawa and Kimmirut. Snow is collected from
roads in the nations capital and put into a big container, where its
compacted. Then the walls are opened and out comes a block of snow. Some of
it is good to work with, he said, and other parts can be harder, mixed with
sand.
But hes versed his
teammates on what they will be facing and hes optimistic about the teams
chances of winning an award that is, unless he gets lost wandering the
streets of the big city after the days carving is done.
"When Im down
there, I dont use the streets, I use the shapes of the buildings,"
he said. "Thats how I get around."
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