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Woven Art |
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FIVE WOMEN WORK in the round room that is the tapestry studio at the Uqqurmiut Centre for Arts and Crafts in Pangnirtung, Nunavut. Four of them are seated at looms on the floor, their fingers lifting and placing coloured yarns as tapestries unfold row by row. Another selects skeins of wool, batching them into the colours she knows the weavers will need. Conversation flows from family news to community events to the latest hunt as the collaborative effort that transforms a line drawing into fibre art continues. The Uqqurmiut Centre looks out over Pangnirtung, which lies at the edge of a fjord off Cumberland Sound with the mountainous terrain of eastern Baffin Island reaching up around it. Days at the centre are punctuated by the routine events of life in the small Inuit community the sound of a plane landing, signalling the arrival of visitors or a much anticipated mail order package; conversation over a mug of morning coffee; a chat with children as they stop by on their way home from school. Despite the gentle atmosphere, however, there is tremendous artistic energy at work in this tapestry studio, the only one in the North and the largest hand-weaving studio in Canada. The woven art created here can be found at the Nunavut Legislature and in public buildings and homes across North America and in Europe.
Woven art got its start in Pangnirtung in 1970, when the community was provided with a loom through a federal government program that encouraged the development of arts and crafts initiatives as a means of creating an economic base for Inuit settlements. Many women in Pangnirtung were skilled in knitting and sewing and quickly mastered weaving techniques, using their new skill to create exquisite works that reflected Inuit life and memories.
During the last three decades, the style of the tapestries has become more and more complex as the weavers developed their techniques and artistic understanding. "The early strong images against a neutral background could be considered akin to posters," writes von Finckenstein. "In the eighties we have more graphic images, with the contours of the narrative scenes being set off against a clearly defined background, similar to prints. Finally, in the nineties, figure and background blend as they would in an oil painting."
Hickman, who travels to Pangnirtung whenever a new collection is being created, explains that one of the greatest challenges the weavers face is reproducing the various colours and shades of the original artwork. "The subtle variations in tapestry colours are achieved by blending different colours of single-ply yarn," she says. This technique, similar to mixing paints, makes it possible to "paint" with wool.
GEELA KEENAINAK, a senior weaver at the Uqqurmiut Centre, was born at Qipisaa camp on Baffin Island in 1943 and moved to Pangnirtung when she was 22. A skilled seamstress, Keenainak started weaving in 1982. Over the years, she embarked on ever more ambitious projects and now produces stunning tapestries of northern images and landscapes. Her version of Coming Up for Air is one of the 49 Pangnirtung tapestries featured in the Museum of Civilization's Nuvisavik exhibit. "I really liked the image from the beginning," says Keenainak through an Inuktitut interpreter. Creating a tapestry, she explains, is a collaborative effort, with all the weavers at the centre providing suggestions on colours and technique.
The work has played a significant role in heightening the profile of the Uqqurmiut Centre. "Even southern communities were aware that we were working on this monumental piece, which speaks of land and harkens back to an earlier time," says the centre's general manager, Peter Wilson, whose interest in Inuit art coupled with a background in graphic design and small business mangement has helped him raise the profile of the Uqqurmiut Centre. "Ultimately, the centre is the chief vehicle through which the people of Pangnirtung carry out their mission to promote and preserve their local culture and to foster their artistic heritage."
ANNA ETOANGAT WAS 19 when her family moved from Qimmisuuq camp to Pangnirtung in 1966, after her father contracted tuberculosis and needed treatment at the community's health centre. Etoangat has been weaving at the Uqqurmiut studio since 1985 and believes her work and that of her fellow tapestry artists is not only personally fulfilling but historically significant. "Through the stories and pictures we weave, we help to keep our culture strong," she says. "Through weaving the drawings of Elders, I began to pay more attention to the history of my people. It is important that the younger generation see the old ways of life depicted in the tapestries. I hope that weaving in Pangnirtung never stops." Images courtesy of the Canadian Museum of Civilization and the Uqqurimiut Centre for Arts and Crafts. |
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Photography: Merle Toole, Peter Wilson, Harry Foster
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