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Inuit Sculptures FAQ
Sculpture of the
Inuit is descended from the ancient craft of carving, honed for
generations on the land. Most objects traditionally made were useful
in very specific ways. A nomadic people could take little else with
them besides the tools of their daily living.
But a few small objects were carved. Such things as delicate
earrings, dance masks, amulets, fetish figures, intricate combs and
labrets are precious museum pieces today. In recent decades, Inuit
have turned these skills to producing larger works whose austere
beauty has astonished the art world.
Prehistoric Arctic Art
The first people known to produce a significant amount of figurative
art were the Dorset culture (c. 600 BC-1000 AD). They carved bone,
ivory and wood into birds, bears, other land and sea animals, human
figures, masks and face clusters. It is believed that these works
were worn as amulets or used in shamanic rituals.
Around 1000 AD, the people of the Thule culture migrated from
northern Alaska and replaced the Dorset culture. Their art included
some human and animal figures, but consisted primarily of the
graphic embellishment of utilitarian objects such as combs, needle
cases, harpoon toggles and gaming pieces. The decorative and
figurative incised markings on these objects do not seem to have had
religious significance.
Inuit Sculpture in Recent Times
The Thule culture ended in the 16th century, about the same time as
contact with the white man began. Inuit began to barter with
whalers, missionaries and other foreigners. Carvings of animals, as
well as replicas of tools and western-style objects most often
fashioned from ivory, became common trade goods.
Commercial carving began when the Canadian federal government
recognized its potential economic benefit to the Inuit and actively
encouraged the development and promotion of Inuit sculpture. In
1949, in Montreal, the Canadian Handicraft Guild introduced Inuit
carvings to the world. By the 1960s, co-operatives had been set up
in most settlements and the Inuit art market began to flourish.
Raw Materials
A variety of raw materials are used when carving. Some carvers also
combine the different media of stone, whalebone, antler, ivory and
muskox horn. Preference for one medium over another often depends on
the availability of the raw material to the carvers of the
community.
Stone
The term soapstone has been used to describe the raw material for
carving in the Northwest Territories. Actually there are few
soapstone deposits in the NWT. Soapstone is made of talc steatite
and is very soft. Serpentinite, the usual stone used, is a different
class of mineral, much harder, does not scratch with your thumbnail
and comes in a variety of colours. Other stone found in the Arctic
and used in carvings are silstone, argillite, dolomite, quartz and
marble.
Adequate supplies of accessible, good quality stone form the
starting point for carvings. For example, a deposit found at
Aberdeen Bay in 1954 has been the source of millions of dollars
worth of Lake Harbour and Cape Dorset carvings. The Mary River-Nuluujaak
Mountain area deposit found in July 1981 supplies Pond Inlet, Clyde
River, Igloolik and Hall Beach.
Most Inuit carvings are made from light to dark green or black
serpentine-rich rocks that are correctly named serpentinite. The
purest and best material has a distinctive yellowish-green colour,
is very hard and takes a good to excellent polish. Some pieces may
contain veinlets of white serpentine asbestos and others tiny black
magnetite crystals.
The second most common carvingstone is argillite. The distinctive
carvings from Arctic Bay and Sanikiluaq are made from argillite
which ranges from light green to almost black, often has a
distinctive striped grain and takes a beautiful polish.
Stone is often in short supply and artists must travel great
distances over land or by boat to quarry good quality stone using
hammers, chisels, shims and wedges and crowbars. Sometimes
gasoline-powered drills and a non-explosive demolition agent
(S-mite) are used. Local Inuit share carvingstone without question
among their communities.
Whalebone
Weathered bone is found at sites once occupied by the ancient Thule
people, who followed the great bowhead whales along the coast into
the central and eastern Arctic. They used whale ribs as roof spars
on their half-buried sod houses. Nowadays, Inuit carvers find a
different inspiration in the curving shapes and pitted textures of
the bone.
Ivory
Ivory in the Arctic is obtained from the canines of walruses and
whale teeth of both the sperm and killer varieties. As a unique and
identifying feature, polished surfaces of ivory show a pattern of
light and dark diamond-shaped areas like an elongated checkerboard.
Incising carved objects with thin lines, a traditional practice that
extends back into Arctic prehistory, gave rise to scrimshaw, the
ornamentation of shells, ivory and bone by engraving. The peak years
of scrimshaw art coincided with the zenith of the whaling industry,
in the 1830s to 1850s. Complex scenes were "drawn" on ivory with
fine, sharp tools. Filling the incised lines with lampblack, soot,
charcoal or India ink brought out the detail. Tobacco juice was
sometimes used to give a sepia effect. The completed, inked
engraving was polished with whale oil and china clay, pumice powder
or sailmaker's wax and canvas.
Horn
Muskox horn carvings have a soft, rippled texture, shading from
cream to warm brown. The shape of the horn itself is not usually
recognizable as artists freely use their imagination to evoke the
animal and human subjects the material suggests to them.
Evolution of an Inuit Stone Carving
The carver chooses the stone and looks at the hidden creation in its
shape. He begins by sawing the stone into a block. With the
introduction of more modern tools, electric saws are also used. The
rough image is then hacked out by hand tools.
Using a large file, defining details are delineated. Caribou antler
is often affixed to the handle of the file for comfort. A smaller
file is used for the finer details. Electrical tools, such as
flexible shafts, are also used. To smooth the carving, the carver
uses a strip of sandpaper which he pulls under his thumb giving both
control and consistency to the movement and quality of sanding.
The carving is then put into water, ready for further sanding with
wet and dry sandpaper, commencing with a rough grade to a very fine
grade. The carver can tell by feel when the carving is ready for
polishing. This final stage varies with carvers, some preferring a
high polish, others preferring to leave the carving in unpolished
form.
Imagery and Styles
The Inuit population of about 25,000 is widely distributed across
Canada's north and each of the art-producing communities has
developed its own favourite subjects and sculptural style.
From the islands, we see representations of Arctic wildlife,
particularly birds and marine mammals. Generally naturalistic in
style, they can be somewhat stylized, sharp-edged and angular in
appearance, incised with minute detail.
From the eastern Arctic come a variety of styles. Some are rooted in
a love of naturalism and an interest in both wildlife and the spirit
world, often fashioned into almost impossibly thin shapes or
delicately balanced works. Some incorporate a love of the
flamboyant, the dramatic and the decorative. The stone ranges from
many beautiful shades of green to white dolomite and varicoloured
marble. Green stone, especially the apple-green and cream-coloured
shades are particularly highly prized.
Yet other sculptures exhibit a certain heroic realism in animal and
human subjects, working on a large scale in portrayals of dramatic
and emotionally charged shamanic or mythological images. From one
community the sense of humour and whimsy results in images such as
dancing walruses of bone. Sculptures have soft, undulating outlines
and are highly finished. Some whalebone and stone sculptures are
large and rather fantastic in conception, combining the surreal and
the whimsical. Yet others depict the drama of the hunt.
Some communities are best known for their ivory miniatures which
were encouraged by local missionaries. Animals or genre scenes, with
an unpretentious folk art flavour, are the most common subjects.
From the central Arctic, Keewatin steatite stone is grey to black in
colour and very hard. The large, heavy and dynamic carvings of
hunters and animals have little surface detail but hold considerable
emotional power. The muskox is a favourite subject. Female carvers
produce depictions of mothers and children. Scenes of animal-human
transformations are also common.
Also seen are small composite depictions of traditional camp life
fashioned from various types of stone and incorporate wood, copper,
whalebone and antler. Often featuring igloos with detachable tops,
they are descriptive and somewhat static in nature. Recently, muskox
horn has become a popular carving material. Its sweeping curves are
readily transformed into elegant long-necked geese.
No two pieces of Inuit sculpture are ever alike. The techniques and
styles are as varied as the backgrounds of the artists themselves:
Men and women, old and young -- they live across the Arctic,
influenced at times by their peers in the communities. Their works
are found in galleries throughout the world and are a fine
investment. Pieces bought a few years ago have sometimes appreciated
many times over.
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Passages quoted from: Ingo Hessel: Canadian
Inuit Sculpture, 1988. Available from: Inuit Art Section, Department
of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Ottawa, Canada K1A 0H4.
Come visit us at the
Montreal Antique Center, Centre d'Antiquites
de Montreal and see our latest choices.
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