|
February 14, 2003
Nunavut snow sculpture
a threat to public safety
Organizers at Ottawas
Winterlude festival order sculpture demolished by back-hoe
Nunavuts snow sculpting
team carves a replica of a polar bear. Cracks developed in the sculpture and it was torn
down.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL CAPITAL COMMISSION)
|
DENISE
RIDEOUT
OTTAWA Nunavuts
chance to show off its sculptors talents and highlight the territorys
majestic wildlife came toppling down last week into a big heap of snow
in Ottawa.
Three sculptors from Sanikiluaq
were in the national capital to participate in the Canada snow sculpture competition,
one of the biggest attractions of Ottawas Winterlude festival.
During the event, teams
of three sculptors from each province and territory have 43 hours to turn a
16-foot-high, 12-foot-wide, 12-foot-deep, 40-tonne block of snow into a piece
of art.
The Nunavut team, made
up of sculptors Kupapik Ningeocheak, Joe Emikotailuk and Ali Qittosuk, set out
to carve a polar bear, owl and loon for their piece, "Animal Kingdom of
the Arctic."
But their massive sculpture
had to be torn down on Feb. 7, a day before judging.
Two cracks one measuring
about 40 centimetres developed in the lower part of the sculpture, in
the legs of the polar bear.
"There was construction
happening three blocks away and there was some blasting. Then, the sculpture
cracked in the back leg and then in the front leg," said Ningeocheak, captain
of Nunavuts team.
"We heard it crack
when I was working under the bear and I called out to the guys to get out of
there. The crack was getting bigger and bigger," Ningeocheak said.
The Nunavut sculptors tried
repairing the cracks by adding more snow and water, but the cracks were too
big.
Organizers of the snow
sculpture competition feared the large chunk of snow could topple over at any
moment.
"It had become a safety
hazard," said Natalie LeBlanc, coordinator of the winter festival event.
She was forced to order
it demolished.
"We decided the best
thing to do was to take it down because it was such a risk to the Nunavut team
and not only them, but the public and the other sculptors around them."
About 20 minutes after
LeBlanc examined the sculptures cracks, a back-hoe was demolishing the
piece.
Its the first time
in the competitions six-year history that a sculpture has had to be torn
down.
The move was a big blow
to the Nunavut team members. "It was disappointing. We wanted to satisfy
all of Nunavut," Ningeocheak said.
The team decided not to
attend the competitions award ceremony on Feb. 9. But, Ningeocheak said,
the sculptors enjoyed the experience of working with snow a shift from
the soapstone they usually work with.
"We had a good time.
It was a healthy environment to work in. Were looking forward to doing
it again next year and Im looking around for more events in Canada and
the United States to compete in," Ningeocheak said.
The competitions
organizer said despite losing their sculpture, the Nunavut team were good sports
about it.
"As soon as we took
it down, they ran onto the snow block and had their picture taken with the rubble,"
LeBlanc said.
The Prince Edward Island
team took top prize in the competition for their sculpture depicting the Canadian
war memorial at Vimy Ridge, France.
|