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Weetaluktuk, Eli

Weetaluktuk, Eli

Inukjuak

(c. 1910–1958)

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Weetaluktuk, Eli

(c. 1910–1958)

Living in a camp located 40 kilometres south of Inukjuak, QC, Eli Weetaluktuk and his two brothers began creating stone carvings in the early 1950s after the Hudson’s Bay Company post in Inukjuak started purchasing sculptures for export to southern markets. As hunters, Weetaluktuk and his siblings harvested walrus, making use of the ivory in what is largely considered some of the earliest examples of ivory inlay in Inuit sculpture. This experimentation extended to other innovative materials as well, such as melted phonograph records, used by the artist to adorn his sculptures with tunniit and other patterning. Weetaluktuk work is included in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada, the Winnipeg Art Gallery in Manitoba and Carleton University Art Gallery in Ottawa, ON, among many others.

Weetaluktuk, Eli

Woman Skinning Goose

1953
stone
12.7 x 13.9 x 9.7 cm

Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery, The Swinton Collection, Gift of the Women's Committee
G-60-65

  • Woman Skinning Goose

    About

    Woman Skinning Goose

    Woman Skinning Goose

    Weetaluktuk’s sculpture reflects many of the features that characterize Inukjuak sculpture from the mid-fifties onward. Carved from a beautiful, marbled, green-gold serpentinite, this sculpture’s compact solidity and expansive forms give the work a monumentality that belies its relatively small size. The way the woman’s limbs and the goose’s body and wings hug the contours of the stone, rather than projecting from it, remains a stylistic tendency in Inukjuak sculpture even today.


  • Holly Andersen, Sustainable Hunting & Fishing Practices

    Video Story

    Holly Andersen, Sustainable Hunting & Fishing Practices

    Holly Andersen, Sustainable Hunting & Fishing Practices


  • Asinnajuq Discusses Woman Skinning a Goose

    Video Story

    Asinnajuq Discusses Woman Skinning a Goose

    Asinnajuq Discusses Woman Skinning a Goose


  • The George Swinton Collection

    About

    The George Swinton Collection

    The George Swinton Collection

    George Swinton moved to Winnipeg in 1954 to serve on the faculty of the School of Art at the University of Manitoba. He had emigrated from Vienna in 1937; studied at the Art Students League in New York; was artist-in-residence at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario; and worked as a curator at the National Gallery of Canada and the Saskatoon Art Centre. He had bought his first Inuit carving when in Montreal in 1950, and this early interest soon lead to him assisting the Hudson Bay Company with assessing carvings after they arrived in Winnipeg in crates from the company’s Arctic trading posts. His passion for Inuit art was reinforced by his first trip to the arctic, to Inukjuak, in 1957. He wrote two books that are known to every student and collector of Inuit art: Eskimo Sculpture/Sculpture esquimaude (1965) and Sculpture of the Eskimo (1972).

    In 1960 the Gallery made a serious commitment to collecting Inuit art when it purchased 139 major sculptures from Swinton. In 1976 the WAG purchased a second collection from George Swinton consisting of over 900 sculptures, prints, and drawings. An exhibition of the Swinton Collection was held several years later, in 1987, with an accompanying catalogue. In 1989, a further collection of 85 artworks was donated to the gallery.