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April 5, 2002
The world according to Ashevak
Cape Dorset artist takes
centre stage at national art gallery
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
The National Gallery of
Canada will unveil 25 prints by Cape Dorset artist Kenojuak Ashevak this week,
as part of "To Make Something Beautiful," an exhibition of Ashevaks
work.
From April 5 to Oct. 20,
the world famous prints many of owls and ravens with colourful swirling
tales and feathers will hang in the prestigious gallery. The artists
illustrious career began in the late 1950s when Inuit art promoter James Houston
commissioned the young bride to sew three sealskin designs. The request was
the start of something beautiful and now historical.
"The [original] designs
simple forms and bold outlines were particularly suited for printmaking,"
wrote Ellie Klippenstein in her essay The Evolution of Kenojuak Ashevaks
Two Dimensional Inuit Art Work.
"Kenojuak points at
different sources for her imagery: her imagination, her memories and her experiences.
Since she does not know a lot of oral tradition, she prefers not to express
many of the myths and legends for fear that they may be misrepresented. She
prefers to tell of her own experiences and of the Inuit lifestyle as she knew
it growing up."
The show spans five decades
of printmaking.
Exhibit curator Marie Routledge
said "Making Something Beautiful" is more than a retrospective collection.
"Its meant to
look at how she works as an artist. Shes someone who takes faces and owls
and birds and manipulates them into something that is visually pleasing, something
that is beautiful," Routledge said.
The gallery selected the
exhibits title, and Ashevak enthusiastically endorsed the choice, Routledge
said.
Ashevak lives and works
in Cape Dorset. An employee at the West Baffin Eskimo Co-operative said the
artist was pleased with the Ottawa opening. Ashevak is scheduled to make a guest
appearance at the National Gallery on April 28.
Deemed the most internationally
recognized Inuit artist by Canadian art critics, Ashevak received the Order
of Canada in 1967 and was elected to the Royal Academy in 1974.
Three of her images were
reproduced as postage stamps and her work has appeared in galleries across the
United States, Europe and Canada. She has been the subject of numerous books,
book chapters, magazines and newspaper articles.
During the seven-month
run of "To Make Something Beautiful," the National Film Boards
Eskimo Artist: Kenojuak will play continuously in the Inuit wing of the gallery.
The 1964 film is about the life and times of the artist and her connection to
the land.
Ashevak is no stranger
to the National Gallery of Canada. In 1961, the gallery acquired The Enchanted
Owl. The gallery now owns 64 prints.
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