|
March 14, 2003
Canada Council spends $48,000
on Inuit art
Thirty-nine pieces will
become part of art bank collection
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
These
two works by Jimmy Manning, Gathering/Spring Fishing, make up a diptych
a two-piece work bought by the Canada Council Art Bank.
(PHOTOS COURTESY
OF THE CANADA COUNCIL ART BANK)
|
MIRIAM
HILL
A visit to Nunavut this
year by Victoria Henry, director of the Canada Council Art Bank, has paid off
for both the Canada Council and the territorys artists.
As part of its 30th anniversary
celebration, the art bank decided to enhance its collection and announced last
fall that it would make a special purchase of Aboriginal art. More than 400
artists from across the country sent in photos of works to be judged.
Seventy-one works by 61
First Nations, Métis and Inuit artists with a total value of about
$150,000 were selected.
Thirty-nine of the 71 pieces
came from Nunavut artists. The Council spent about $33,000 on work by artists
currently living in Nunavut, and an additional $15,000 on pieces by Nunavut-born
artists who live in other parts of Canada.
Twenty-eight artists from
Clyde River, Kimmirut, Cape Dorset, Iqaluit, Igloolik, Rankin Inlet, Baker Lake,
Pangnirtung and Qikiqtarjuaq are represented in the purchases.
The art bank was created
in 1972 to support the efforts of Canadian visual artists and provide public-sector
institutions with the opportunity to rent artwork for their offices. Of the
18,000-piece collection, about 6,400 pieces are out on rental to more than 200
government and corporate clients across the country.
Victoria Henry, accompanied
by her colleague Louise Profeit-LeBlanc, came to Nunavut in January to encourage
Aboriginal artists to submit work to the art bank, and answer questions about
the councils programs and grants.
About 15 people sat in
on a presentation at the Parish Hall in Iqaluit to learn about the Crown Corporation,
and many subsequently submitted work to the jury.
However, one artist bypassed
the jury and sold a carving directly to Henry. Lypa Pitsiulak met Henry in an
Iqaluit restaurant after travelling 15 hours from Pangnirtung by snowmobile.
He sold her a piece titled Husband and Wife with Shaman Animal Helpers.
"It means the Canada
Council notices the North now," said Beth Beattie, coordinator of the Nunavut
Arts and Crafts Association, which promotes the growth and appreciation of Nunavut
artists and the production of their work.
Beattie had yet to hear
of the decision when contacted by Nunatsiaq News, but was thrilled at the news.
"Its really
good. Its a great opportunity. Now that the artists know that the art
bank exists its more likely that theyll connect with the Canada
Council on other things like grants."
She said the Canada Council
has sent applications to Nunavut, but Henrys visit was the first time
the council has made a real push at connecting with the North.
"Before, with the
applications, it was hard to get people to fill them out and it still is,"
she admitted.
But this latest purchase
shows artists what the art bank can do, Beattie said, and may compel artists
to fill out and submit applications for grants and submit works for purchase
consideration to the art bank in the future.
The 71 works from across
the country will be unveiled publicly on March 29 during an open house at the
art banks Ottawa office. The event will include tours, talks by artists,
storytelling, drummers, dancing and throat singing.
|