September 13, 2002
From the artists
mind
Pangnirtung MLA Peter
Kilabuk, left, stands in front of the finished tapestry with weavers Geetee
Maniapik, artist Joel Maniapik and weaver Anna Etuangat.
(PHOTOS BY MIRIAM
HILL)
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Joel Maniapiks watercolour
painting was transformed by Pangnirtung weavers into a giant work of woven art
Joel Maniapik perches on
a sealskin seat in the lobby of the legislative assembly in Iqaluit with his
wife and son beside him. He looks uncomfortable as people begin to file in the
doors at either end of the building.
Maniapik, a well-known
Pangnirtung artist, is waiting for the unveiling of the largest tapestry ever
produced by weavers at the communitys Uqqurmiut Centre for Arts and Crafts.
It was Maniapiks watercolour painting, Back Then, that was chosen in January
by the weavers to be depicted in the 10-foot by 22-foot mural tapestry. He has
yet to see the finished product.
A hearty crowd has assembled
on a damp, grey night to watch as an enormous beige tarp is pulled from the
tapestry hanging on the lower half of the lobby wall. It was designed for the
upper half of the wall and will be moved up after the Queens visit to
the city in October.
Weavers Geetee Maniapik,
a long-time tapestry studio manager, and Anna Etuangat removed the covering
to a round of applause. Because of bad weather, the other five weavers on the
project, Jeanie Nakoolak, Kawtysie Kakee, Igah Etoangat and Leesee and Mary
Kakee, were not able to attend the unveiling. The Uqqurmiut Centres general
manager Peter Wilson was also absent.
Joel Maniapik, Saa Pitsiulak, and their son Mosesie in front of the tapestry
hanging in the legislative assembly.
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Back Then, a work of pinks,
purples and other muted shades, shows a landscape of rolling hills with a small
group of caribou in the lower left corner. A large inuksuk stands in the foreground
and a group of hunters walk in the distance on the right side of the work. Birds
fly overhead.
To come up with a pattern
for the tapestry, the work was scanned into a computer and blown up by about
200 per cent. It was printed off in pieces on about 300 sheets of photocopy
paper, which were hung on the tapestry studios wall for the weavers to
work from. While the entire project took between six and seven months to complete,
Geetee Maniapik says the weaving
took about four months alone.
"We worked regularly,
nine to five, five days a week," she says.
The size of the tapestry
was a challenge for the weavers. While they had produced a 12-foot by 7-foot
tapestry for Iqaluits Unikkaarvik Visitor Centre in 1992, the large loom
in the studio is only 12 feet wide, so the latest piece had to be woven sideways.
As lengths were completed it was rolled onto a beam at the weavers feet, so
the workers themselves didnt see the product as a whole until it was completely
finished.
"The seven weavers
worked side by side," Geetee says. "There were difficult times, but
we worked together."
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Joel Maniapik's watercolour,
Back Then, was chosen by weavers in January as the image to depict.
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Deborah Hickman, the projects
arts advisor, admits there was great anticipation to see the finished tapestry
unrolled.
"It just looked like
a huge tent of beautiful colours," she says, smiling.
Before the tapestry was
packed for its trip to Iqaluit, where it will remain as a gift to the legislative
assembly from the Uqqurmiut Centre, it was put on display at the community centre
in Pangnirtung.
Weaver Anna Etuangat, speaking
in Inuktitut, says when people went into the studio and saw the tapestry being
worked on they really enjoyed it and didnt expect to see a finished piece
of such magnitude.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Photocopied pieces
of paper hung on the wall in the Uqqurmiut Centre's tapestry studio as a guide
for the weavers.
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"Theyre very
proud of this tapestry," she says.
Hickman says this project
puts the tapestry studio on the map as one of the few in the world that can
produce commissioned tapestries for installation in large buildings. Back Then,
she guesses, would carry a dollar value of about $150,000.
As Joel Maniapik, his partner
Saa Pitsiulak and their baby son Mosesie admire the tapestry, Maniapik says
hes thrilled with the work the weavers have done. He humbly says the watercolour,
specifically designed for the tapestry, was a spontaneous creation.
"I do like to go on
hikes, though, I think that may have been my inspiration."
Pitsiulak beams with pride.
"He made it in December,
in a couple of hours," she says, continuing to tell the story of how before
they became a couple she bought one of his acrylic paintings.
Mosesie wriggles in the
hood of his mothers amauti, swinging his hands and flashing a massive
smile.
"Hes been saying
ataata [father] a lot today," Pitsiulak says.
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