Timiak and Eguachak Item Number: Na801 from the MOA: University of British Columbia
Print depicting a seal with a purple body, a green head, and green outstretched flippers. The seal is standing on a rock surrounded by water and there is a brown insect depicted above the seal's open mouth. Below image on left: "Timiak and Eguchak Pitseolak stonecut 46/50 Dorset 1975," name of artist in Inuit syllabics. Stamped with name of printmaker in Inuit syllabics above Cape Dorset stylized 'red igloo' seal at lower corner on right. Canadian Eskimo Arts Council's blind embossed stamp at lower edge on right.
Contemporary Inuit prints were first produced at Cape Dorset in 1957. Although precursors to printmaking can be seen in women's skin applique work and in men's incising of ivory, stone and bone, the impetus for printmaking was as a commercial venture. This venture was established jointly by Inuit artists and John Houston, the civil administrator for Cape Dorset. Other Inuit communities quickly followed the commercial success of Cape Dorset's West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative. Printmaking developed as a communal activity following a Japanese, rather than a Western, model of serigraph production. Each year the cooperatives produce a series of limited edition prints which are sold in the retail art market. In 1965, the Canadian Eskimo Arts Council was established from the Canadian Eskimo Art Committee to ensure high standards were maintained. Printmaking, along with stone carving, provide cash income for communities which have undergone rapid and significant change, during the late 20th century, from traditional hunting based societies to settled communities dependent on consumer goods. The prevalent images depicted in Inuit art are of traditional life, arctic animals and mythology. Recently, contemporary subjects have been depicted by a minority of artists.
contemporary art