Inuit Art

12 02, 2018

Upik Gets Married!

By |2021-02-28T13:42:01-05:00February 12th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art|0 Comments

In my last blog I stressed the centrality of Inuit families for survival in the harsh Arctic. Freezing conditions, lack of social services and isolation made division of labor for essential tasks within the family a matter of life and death. Yet, as unlikely as it would seem under such conditions, art blossomed among the [...]

5 02, 2018

Families and Groups in Inuit Art

By |2020-07-23T23:23:38-04:00February 5th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art|1 Comment

Faced with the harsh conditions in the Canadian Artic, the Inuit’s very existence is dependent upon family and community. Food, proper shelter and social safety networks – critical for life in any culture – are scarce for the Inuit. Children are necessary to maintain the family – to hunt and fish among other supports. Larger social groups working together are also key to survival. In short, individuality submits to family and collective welfare. So it’s not surprising that family and the larger community is a popular theme in Inuit art. What may surprise you is the very different approaches the artists have taken.

27 01, 2018

Movement in Inuit Art

By |2020-03-30T08:28:03-04:00January 27th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art|0 Comments

Everything moves in one way or another – living creatures, ocean waves, geological formations and orbiting planets – and art is no exception. Movement first attracted me to Inuit art, which I illustrated with a picture of a walking polar bear in my previous blog. The way Inuit artists capture movement is what first attracted [...]

19 01, 2018

Collecting Inuit Art

By |2021-02-28T13:41:46-05:00January 19th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art|3 Comments

I’m infected with the collecting bug, which I probably acquired at conception. I don’t think it’s contagious. In short, I surrendered to my genes, those authoritarian despots. They made collecting an expression of my character. While I am a collector, my sister Jephta isn’t, despite having the same parents and being raised in the same [...]

5 02, 2016

Jellyfish in Art

By |2020-07-23T23:35:31-04:00February 5th, 2016|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art, Jellyfish Central, Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Science|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |4 Comments

The gallery in this post features strong pieces of art, masterfully done, that make the case that jellyfish proliferation affects all of us and has filtered to art, as important issues always do.

10 04, 2016

Shamanic Transformation and Evolution

By |2021-02-28T13:34:47-05:00April 10th, 2016|Categories: Blog, Inuit Art|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Here I blend evolution with Inuit art and shamans, unlikely cousins. Inuit sculptures hooked me the first time I saw them. Inuit artists live in the Arctic of central and east Canada. Although Inuit art is a known form of ethnic art, few appreciate its beauty, originality and significance. I happened upon it 25 years [...]

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