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August 16, 2002
Big-city bound
Kimmirut
carver prepares for solo showing in Toronto while watching out for polar bears
on Resolution Island
MIRIAM
HILL
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The works of Kimmirut's
Matto Michael will be on display at the guild Shop in Toronto from
Aug. 8 to Sept. 8. The gallery first featured his carvings in 1987.
(PHOTOS BY MIRIAM
HILL )
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RESOLUTION
ISLAND - Tell me you're joking," the man says as he lifts a box full of
soapstone and carries it off the boat on the shore of Resolution Island. He
starts to lug it across dangerously uneven ground to a campsite.
"Why
would I be carrying soapstone?" the man, part of a Canadian Forces and
Navy sovereignty exercise on the island, asks no one in particular.
The box
of soapstone is for Kimmirut carver Matto Michael. Michael, a Canadian Ranger,
arrived on the island via the Navy ship HMCS Summerside to act as part of a
24-hour polar bear patrol with five other Rangers. He brought a box filled with
soapstone in case bad weather forced the Rangers to stay on the island longer
than expected.
Michael
has a plane ticket to Toronto, for a solo show opening Aug. 8 at the Guild Shop.
He was scheduled to carve in the gallery on Aug. 9 and 10.
Michael,
the son of acclaimed carvers Eliyah and the late Annie Michael, is used to travelling
the world. He's been to a number of cities in Canada and the United States with
his work.
"Carvings
are my tickets," he explains. Carving since the age of 13, he learned from
watching his parents and then honed his own style.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Michael specializes
in Arctic animals: "There's alot of imagination going into the stone."
including the polar bear.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF
THE GUILD SHOP)
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Michael
sometimes works with ivory and antler, but his medium of choice is soapstone
and his subject of choice Arctic animals.
What he
carves "really depends on the stone," he says. "There's a lot
of imagination going into the stone."
He recalls
meeting an Arab man on a trip to Iqaluit some years ago.
"He
said, 'I hear you're good carver,'" Michael says. The man asked Michael
to carve something for him, and Michael left it up to him what the animal would
be.
"I
thought he'd want a polar bear or walrus, but he asked for a camel," Michael
says. Michael carved the camel from his imagination, and the man was pleased.
Michael
opens the cardboard box and unwraps chunks of partially carved soapstone protected
by padding. He takes out tools and in his bright red Ranger sweatshirt and ball
cap starts to chip away at the stone.
"I
won't have time to do much here [on Resolution Island]," he says. His job
on the weekend trip is to keep personnel involved in the exercise free from
harm, but he'll try to complete the works at the Toronto gallery.
A TV sitcom
fan, Michael says he was thrilled on one of his trips to visit Cincinnati, the
home of a favourite show, WKRP in Cincinnati.
"I
wanted to see the WKRP place," he says. He was disappointed to learn it
was a fictional radio station. "But I got to see the fountain they show
in the opening."
Michael's
show will run until Sept. 8.
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