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Kabluitok, Eugenie Tautoonie

Kabluitok, Eugenie Tautoonie

Kivalliq

(1914–1986)

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Kabluitok, Eugenie Tautoonie

(1914–1986)

Eugenie Tautoonie Kabluitok (1914-1986) was a carver and seamstress from Rankin Inlet, NU. She created carvings, wall hangings, dolls, parkas, vests and other wearables. Her work was exhibited at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in 1973 and 1978. Eleven of her carvings and one doll is held in the WAG permanent collection. From a Dancing Walrus (n.d.) and the whimsical Mother and Child Riding Fish (1971), to her murals and her mitts, the strength and unique presence of Kabluitok’s artwork is undeniable. With a distinct and colourful style that evokes whimsy and humour, she was able to instill in her work the air of lightheartedness and resilience found in her community.

Kabluitok, Eugenie Tautoonie

Mother and Child Riding Fish (Kiviuq legend?)

1970–1971
stone
10.3 x 29.5 x 6.9 cm

Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Gift of Faye and Bert Settler
2001-187

  • Mother and Child Riding Fish

    About

    Mother and Child Riding Fish

    Mother and Child Riding Fish

    It is possible that this carving is related to the Kiviuq legend, in which Kiviuq rides a fish while searching for his family, but it has not been recorded that a mother and child ride the fish along with Kiviuq. Women riding a fish is not a common theme but one that has been explored by several artists such as Jessie Oonark. In this carving, both the fish and the passengers look joyful during the ride.


  • Carving Stone in the Canadian Arctic

    Carving Stone in the Canadian Arctic

    Carving Stone in the Canadian Arctic

    A sales exhibition of Inuit carvings at the Montreal-based Canadian Handicrafts Guild in November 1949 is widely recognized as marking the beginning of an artistic industry that was to transform the lives of many Inuit. The use of stone to create carvings for export to southern markets began with a test purchase by the Guild in 1949 in the Inukjuak area of Nunavik.
    In the early 1950s, the procurement of carving stone was largely a matter of gathering it from the ground, especially beaches. As demand for stone carvings increased, so did the search for more attractive carving stones. For many people, “carving stone” is synonymous with “soapstone,” but this is a com¬mon misconception. Soapstone is a specific type of rock called steatite. It contains a high proportion of the mineral talc, which gives the stone a waxy or soapy feel. Grey steatite stones have been mainly used by carvers from Baker Lake and Arviat, although a harder, dark-coloured peridotite stone from a quarry site at Jigging Point, at the east end of Baker Lake, has also been used by Baker Lake artists.
    Many artists find steatite too soft for sculpting because it does not hold a good polish and will not allow intricate detail. The most desirable carving stones are serpentinite, and deposits of serpentinite have been located in most areas with carving activity. The stone can vary from a bright jade-green colour, as often associated with the sculpture from the community of Kinngait (Cape Dorset), to a nearly black colour mined by carvers from the Kitikmeot communities of Taloyoak, Gjoa Haven, and Kugaaruk. Currently, the main source of serpentinite on south Baffin Island is a large quarry site in Korok Inlet. Kitikmeot carvers mine their stone from a deposit near Murchison Lake.
    Both serpentinite and steatite are types of igneous rocks that derive from molten material, such as volcanic magma. In a second main category are carving stones that derive from sedimentary rocks formed by the compression of layers of sediment. Marble and argillite are examples of such stones used by Inuit carvers. A large surface deposit of white marble stretches for miles north of Andrew Gordon Bay on south Baffin Island, but the hardness of this stone deters many carvers who do not have the necessary specialized tools. Argillite is a highly prized carving stone because it is soft enough to carve yet hard enough to produce a good polish. Its fine sedimentary layering lends a distinctive banded texture to carvings. Argillite is commonly used in sculpture from Sanikiluaq and Arctic Bay. In Sanikiluaq it occurs in varied shades of grey-green and in Arctic Bay the stone is a distinctive grey-ochre colour.
    For more detailed information, see Susan Gustavison, Northern Rock: Contemporary Inuit Stone Sculpture. Kleinberg: McMichael Canadian Art Collection, 1999.


  • Mother and Child Riding Fish (Kiviuq legend?)

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    Mother and Child Riding Fish (Kiviuq legend?)

    Mother and Child Riding Fish (Kiviuq legend?)