June 7, 2002
Swiss odyssey
Cape Dorsets Ohito
Ashoona takes on Switzerland and prepares for new worlds
MIRIAM
HILL
Its a warm day in
Basel, Switzerland, and Cape Dorset artist Ohito Ashoona takes a break from
carving in the backyard of the Canadian Arctic Gallery.
An exhibit of Ashoonas
carvings has been on display at the gallery since June 1.
There is a six-hour time
difference between Iqaluit and Basel, and Ashoona laughs when he realizes both
the difference in time and in weather between the locales.
"Im wearing
a T-shirt, its warm, but its a little bit rainy," he says of
the 24 C weather.
Ashoona usually divides
his time between Cape Dorset and his studio in Toronto, where he is associated
with the Eskimo Art Gallery.
More than 100 people visited
the Swiss gallery during the exhibit opening last Saturday. The Canadian Ambassador
to Switzerland, Jean-Paul Hubert, was on hand and gave a speech praising the
accomplishments of Nunavut artists and specifically mentioning Ashoonas
2002 National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Arts and Culture.
After some food and a long
talk with the ambassador, Ashoona spoke with visitors who had come to admire
his work.
"I was kind of shy,
a little bit," he admits. "Ive never been in Europe before."
Many people spoke English, he says, but no one spoke Inuktitut, so he tried
to teach some simple words and phrases.
"They were trying
to find out how we work, where we get the stone from and I told them how we
have to get the stone," he explains. "I told them we have to buy lots
of gas to go get the stone in the summertime and we work together, maybe 20
people in the mine, with shovels. We dont use dynamite, we use shovels
and wheelbarrows."
Ashoona comes from a family
of well-known artisans. His grandmother, the late Pitseolak Ashoona, produced
world-renowned drawings and prints and his uncle Kiawak Ashoona is a respected
carver, as was his late father Kaka Ashoona. Ohito started carving when he was
about 12. Some of his familys work is also on display in the same gallery
until the exhibit closes July 31.
"I used to watch my
dad and just followed his steps," he says. "I felt better to see my
dads carvings [in the same gallery]." While he creates pieces with
shamanistic themes, as well as birds and inuksuit, Ashoonas subject of
choice is the polar bear.
"My favourite animal
is the king of the ice," he says. "They are very smart, just like
us. I usually make mothers and cubs. I like them, they are very strong."
When he looks at a piece
of stone he examines the shape and envisions what he will carve before making
a mark.
"Ive got an
idea in my head all the time," he says.
A representative from the
Swiss gallery saw his work in Toronto and invited him to show in Switzerland
last year, he explains. The nitty-gritty planning has been going on since March
and he has been treated like royalty since arriving in Europe. He left Toronto
in mid-May for his first trip across the Atlantic and was taken to Cologne,
Germany, and to Paris.
"They took me to the
Eiffel tower in France and I travelled by car to Switzerland," he says.
"Its beautiful country." He visited museums and art galleries
en route and was amazed by the masterpieces on display.
"Holy cow, I couldnt
believe it," he says, chuckling. "I saw all kinds of art. I saw big
ones, and Michelangelos carvings, lots of carvings about 500 years ago,
I couldnt believe it."
Sales were brisk at the
opening, he admits, but he doesnt know how many were sold.
"Ive been very,
very busy," he says. In the backyard of the gallery he is finishing a carving
of a man building an inuksuk a piece that has already been sold, even
though it isnt complete.
"I have to finish
it before this coming Thursday," he says. "I dont talk to the
people very much right now because Ive got to finish it."
Ashoona says he will be
returning to Cape Dorset at the end of the month and plans to stay for the summer.
Though he doesnt know where his next exhibition will be, hes open
to showing anywhere in the world.
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