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Kingwatsiak, Mikigak

Kingwatsiak, Mikigak

Kinngait (Cape Dorset)

(b. 1943)

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Kingwatsiak, Mikigak

(b. 1943)

Mikigak Kingwatsiak, a carver and printmaker from Kinngait (Cape Dorset), NU, is best known for his stone and marble sculptures featuring human figures and northern animals such as bears, birds and seals. Inuit mythological figures, such as the Arctic sea goddess Sedna, also frequently appear in his work. Many of Kingwatsiak’s carvings—and in particular, his drawings—are inspired by imaginary creatures. His father was a shaman, and Kingwatsiak grew up listening to many stories about his life. Art also flows through Kingwatsiak’s family. His brother, Iyola Kingwatsiak, was a noted carver and printmaker. His three sisters, Anna Kingwatsiak, Keeleemeeoomee Samualie and Tye Adla, were also talented artists. Kingwatsiak’s art has been featured in a variety of exhibitions at galleries and museums across Canada, as well as internationally in England, Germany and the United States. He twice appeared in the annual Cape Dorset Graphics collection exhibition (1960, 1961). Kingwatsiak is represented in several public collections including at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, ON, the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and at the Dennos Museum Center in Traverse City, Michigan.

Kingwatsiak, Mikigak

Spirit

1960–1965
stone (serpentinite)
16.2 x 26.9 x 6.5 cm

Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Twomey Collection, with appreciation to the Province of Manitoba and Government of Canada
1020.71

  • Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit

    About

    Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit

    Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit

    Mikigak’s father, Kingwatsiak, was a shaman and often told his children stories about his younger years when shamans were active. Mikigak’s fascination with bizarre creatures was not unique. Early 1960s Kinngait drawings, prints, and sculptures are replete with similar imagery. It may be that after decades of Christian missionary repression of shamanism and belief in the spirit world, artists’ imaginations were set free, with the encouragement of arts advisors such as James Houston and Terry Ryan


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  • The Jerry Twomey Collection of Inuit Sculpture

    About

    The Jerry Twomey Collection of Inuit Sculpture

    The Jerry Twomey Collection of Inuit Sculpture

    In 1971, the monumental Jerry Twomey Collection of 4,000 Inuit carvings was acquired by the WAG. Twomey was a geneticist and a co-founder of Winnipeg’s T&T Seeds. Beginning in 1952 and throughout the 1950s and 1960s, he collected sculpture from virtually every art-producing Inuit community. He was fascinated by the distribution of artistic talent within families and across generations and collected the work of individual artists in depth.

    In 1969, Twomey decided to retire from the seed business and move to California to breed roses full-time. The disposition of his collection became a matter for intense negotiation with a number of museums and collectors. George Swinton persuaded then Premier Edward Schreyer of the collection’s importance and in August 1971 Schreyer quickly signed an Order-in-Council to raise $185,000, or two-thirds of the funds required to purchase the collection for the WAG. In June 1972, James Richardson, then federal minister of supply and services, presented a cheque for the remaining $75,000 at a ceremony at the Gallery. To celebrate both the opening of the new Gallery building on Memorial Boulevard and the acquisition of the Twomey Collection, a small show was installed in 1972. In 2003, a comprehensive WAG exhibition and catalogue revealed the incomparable record of the development of Inuit art in the 1950s and 1960s provided by the Twomey Collection.


  • Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit

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    Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit

    Mikigak Kingwatsiak, Spirit