February 14, 2003
Piecing together the past
Iqaluit museum curator
tracks down the forgotten stories of Inuit art history
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Nunatta Sunakkutaangit
Museum curator Brian Lunger with two pieces of a three-piece bear slaughter
scene made by Kimmirut artist Pauloosie Padluk circa 1969.
(PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nunatsiaq News
There is a story behind
every Inuit carving. But among the vast collection of the Nunatta Sunakkutaangit
Museum in Iqaluit, there are some pieces whose story remains a mystery.
Brian Lunger, the museums
curator, is embarking on a $12,000 project to discover the history of the mysterious
carvings. Over the next two months, he will travel to Kimmirut, Clyde River
and Arctic Bay, taking along photos of the rarely seen pieces.
His mission is to gather
information about the pieces, many dating back to the 1960s, from the carvers
themselves or from family members.
If the artist has passed
away, Lunger hopes elders and family members can provide details about when
and where a carving was made. He has hired community-based interpreters and
set up interviews with elders and family members in advance.
The Government of Nunavuts
department of culture, language, elders and youth (CLEY) is providing the funding.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Qalupilik,
by Sakiassee Qaunaq is one of a dozen carvings from Arctic Bay included in the
project.
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"Theres been
no formal attempt to do this before. Sometimes all we have is a name [of an
artist], or not even that," Lunger said. "There are some really interesting
and unique pieces, even abstracts."
The collection includes
a three-piece hunting scene, screaming serpents and a two-headed, accordion-playing
bear all in a variety of materials, including stone, bone and ivory.
The unidentified, partially
identified and even misidentified carvings are one-tenth of the museums
permanent 700-piece Baffin region collection gathered between 1965 and
1975 by Government of the Northwest Territories arts and crafts officers.
In some ways, the project
began years before Lunger even submitted his proposal to CLEY. He routinely
asks museum visitors where theyre from. Three years ago, a man who grew
up in an outpost camp near Pond Inlet was admiring a whalebone carving of a
woman. The visitor, Seagna Atagootak, who has since passed away, was the carvings
creator.
"Its a real
pleasure to discover a person knows something about a carving. Thats happened
a few times," Lunger said.
Documenting Inuit art history
is a way of preserving stories that may otherwise be lost, Lunger said. He will
use the information to create more accurate exhibits, correcting the spelling
errors and omissions of the past. But first, information from the interviews
will be posted on the museums Web page. Down the road, Lunger hopes to
compile a book or catalogue.
The 60-piece collection
is currently stored between the museum and the legislature building.
Lunger hopes the project
continues next year and expands to include Pangnirtung, Pond Inlet, Igloolik
and Cape Dorset.
"Id love to
go to Grise Fiord but it would probably be cheaper to fly people here,"
Lunger said.
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