Kenojuak Ashevak, CCONuRCA (Inuktitut: ᕿᓐᓄᐊᔪᐊᖅ ᐋᓯᕙᒃ, Qinnuajuaq Aasivak) was a Canadian Inuk artist. She was born on October 3, 1927 at Camp Kerrasak on southern Baffin Island, and died on January 8, 2013 in Cape Dorset, Nunavut. Known primarily for her drawings as a graphic artist, she also had a diverse artistic experience, making sculpture and engraving and working with textiles and also on stained glass.
She is celebrated[3] as a leading figure of modern Inuit art and one of Canada's preeminent artists and cultural icons.[4] Part of a pioneering generation of Arctic creators, her career spanned more than five decades. She made graphic art, drawings and prints in stone cut, lithography and etching, beloved by the public, museums and collectors alike.[5][6]
Kenojuak has mainly painted animals in fantastical, brightly-colored aspects, but also landscapes and scenes of everyday life, in a desire to represent them in a unique aesthetic, making them beautiful by her own standards, and conveying a real spirit of happiness and positivity. She has an intuitive and sensitive way of working : she begins her works without having a clear idea of the final result, letting herself be guided by her intuition and her own perception of aestheticism through colors and shapes. She painted throughout her life, never ceasing to seek out new techniques to renew her artistic creation. At the beginning of her life, her fantastical, seemingly simple works became more complex over time, taking on a more technical aspect. At the end of her life, the artist returned to simpler, more singular forms and even brighter colors.
Ashevak surmounted her circumstances to become an artist. Her range of mediums was exceptionally broad and included stained glass. Her achievements were honoured. She was the first Inuit artist inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame (2001), was made an Officer of the Order of Canada (1967) and promoted to Companion in 1982. She received the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts (2008) and the Order of Nunavut (2012). Her work, with its superb design qualities, was used for Canadian stamps, coins and banknotes. Kenojuak's best-known work, making her one of the most famous Inuit artists, remains “The Enchanted Owl” dating from 1960. This major work by the artist was used on a stamp to commemorate the centenary of the Northwest Territories in the 1970s. Her artistic work is thus recognized as an integral part of Inuit culture, and more broadly of Canadian culture. In 2017, the Bank of Canada unveiled a commemorative $10 banknote in honour of Canada's 150th birthday featuring Ashevak's print Owl's Bouquet on the note. She received Honorary Doctorates from Queen's University (1991) and the University of Toronto (1992) and many films were made about her life.
Early life and family
Kenojuak Ashevak was born in an igloo in an Inuit camp, Ikirasaqa[1] or Ikirasaq,[2] at the southern coast of Baffin Island.
Kenojuak grew up in the heart of the semi-nomadic hunting tradition.
Her father, Ushuakjuk, an Inuit hunter and fur trader, and her mother, Silaqqi, named Kenojuak after Silaqqi's deceased father.[7]
According to this Inuit naming tradition, the love and respect that had been accorded to her during her lifetime would now pass on to their daughter.[8] Kenojuak also had a brother and a sister.
Kenojuak remembered Ushuakjuk as "a kind and benevolent man." Her father, a respected angakkuq (shaman), "had more knowledge than average mortals, and he would help all the Inuit people [sic]." According to Kenojuak, her father believed he could predict weather, predict good hunting seasons and even turn into a walrus; he also had the ability "to make fish swarm at the surface so it was easier to fish."[citation needed] Her father came into conflict with Christian converts, and some enemies assassinated him in a hunting camp in 1933, when she was only six.[8][9]
After her father's murder, Kenojuak moved with her widowed mother Silaqqi and family to the home of Silaqqi's mother, Koweesa, who taught her traditional crafts, including the repair of seal skins for trade with the Hudson's Bay Company and how to make waterproof clothes sewn with caribou sinew.[10]
When she was 19, her mother, Silaqqi, and stepfather, Takpaugni, arranged for her to marry Johnniebo Ashevak (1923–1972), a local Inuit hunter. Kenojuak was reluctant, she said, even playfully throwing pebbles at him when he would approach her.[11] In time, however, she came to love him for his kindness and gentleness, a man who developed artistic talents in his own right and who sometimes collaborated with her on projects; the National Gallery of Canada holds two of Johnniebo's works, Taleelayo with Sea Bird (1965) and Hare Spirits (1960).[12]
She fell victim to tuberculosis, hospitalized between 1952 and 1955 in Parc Savard hospital in Quebec city where she's going to meet Harold Pfeiffer who taught arts and crafts to hospital patients, and a civil administrator and pioneer Inuit art promoter James Archibald Houston who will help her to launch her career.
She had just given birth when she was forcibly transferred; the baby was adopted by a neighbouring family. Several of Kenojuak's children died while she was confined in hospital.[13]
In 1966, Kenojuak and Johnniebo moved to Cape Dorset to enable her children to attend school.[14] Many of their children and grandchildren succumbed to disease, as did her husband after 26 years of marriage. Three daughters of Kenojuak, Mary, Elisapee Qiqituk, and Aggeok, died in childhood, and four sons, Jamasie, her adopted son Ashevak, and Kadlarjuk and Qiqituk. The latter two were adopted at birth by another family.[8][15]
The year after Johnniebo died in 1972, Kenojuak remarried, to Etyguyakjua Pee; he died in 1977. In 1978 she married Joanassie Igiu.[16] She had 11 children by her first husband and adopted five more; seven of her children died in childhood.[16] At the time of her death from lung cancer, she was living in a wood-frame house in Cape Dorset (now Kinngait).[11]
During Ashevak's stay at Parc Savard hospital in Quebec City, 1952 to 1955 she learned to make dolls from Harold Pfeiffer and to do beadwork. At the end of her hospital stay, her crafts attracted the attention of a civil administrator and pioneer Inuit art promoter James Archibald Houston and his wife alma who encouraged her to persevere with her artistic activities.[19]
Houston introduced print-making to Cape Dorset artists in the 1950s, and he and his wife began marketing Inuit arts and crafts, including an exhibit of Inuit art in 1959.[20] James Houston wrote about this time in 1999 : she was hesitant at first, claiming that she could not draw and that drawing was a man’s business. Yet the next time that she visited the Houstons, the sheets of paper that Alma had given her were filled with pencil sketches.[19] In 1958 her first print, Rabbit Eating Seaweed, was produced from one of her designs on a sealskin bag, and by 1959 Kenojuak and other Cape Dorset Inuit had formed the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative as a senlavik (workshop) for aspiring Inuit artists, later known as Kinngait Studios.[8] Fellow members included Pitaloosie Saila, Mayoreak Ashoona, and Napatchie Pootagook.[21]
The first woman to take part in the printmaking workshop in Cape Dorset, Kenojuak soon found success : her work was soon recognized internationally. First displayed in art catalogs, her works were later exhibited in art galleries. In 1970, Kenojuak and her husband created a mural for the World Expo in Osaka. She became a member of the Royal Canadian Academy in 1974, and a member of the Order of Canada in 1982. In 2002, her work was exhibited at the National Gallery of Canada in the exhibition Kenojuak Ashevak: To make something beautiful. She received the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts in 2008, and became a member of the Order of Nunavut in 2012.
Reception of her work in the Southern Canada
Her reception in southern Canada was in fact rapidly favourable : Rabbit Eating Seaweed was Ashevak's first print, part of a debut exhibition of Inuit graphics. The young woman from the remote Canadian North was an immediate success, said Christine Lalonde, an expert in Inuit art with the National Gallery of Canada. 'She had her own sense of design... She was already willing to let the pencil go, because she had the hand and the eye co-ordination to make the image she already had in her head.' The National Gallery owns several copies of The Enchanted Owl, including the original pencil sketch from 1960. That sketch reveals much, said Lalonde. 'It's a very simple drawing — pencil on pulp paper. But you can see even then how confident and sure her line was as she was making the curves of the fanning feathers.'[20]
In 1963 she was the subject of a National Film Board of Canada documentary by producer John Feeney, Eskimo Artist: Kenojuak, about Kenojuak, then 35, and her family, as well as traditional Inuit life on Baffin Island. The film showed a stonecutter carving her design into a relief block in stone, cutting away all the non-printing surfaces; she would then apply ink to the carved stone, usually in two or more colours, and carefully make 50 "shadow" prints for sale.[22] With the money she earned from the film, Johnniebo was able to purchase his own canoe and become an independent hunter to help provide for the family, which now included a new daughter, Aggeo, and an adopted son, Ashevak.[8]
National Gallery of Canada art expert Christine Lalonde marvelled at her confident artistry: "When you see her, you realize she doesn't use an eraser. She just sits down and she starts to draw."[20]
Ashevak created several pieces of work to commemorate the creation of Nunavut, the third Canadian Territory, including a piece commissioned by the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, Nunavut Qajanatuk (Our Beautiful Land) for the signing of the Inuit Land Claim Agreement in Principle in April 1990; Nunavut, a large hand-coloured lithograph to commemorate the signing of the Final Agreement early in 1994; a large diptych titled Siilavut, Nunavut (Our Environment, Our Land) in April 1999, when the Territory officially came into being.[23]
The work of Ashevak Kenojuak can be found in the collections of Canada's National Gallery,[24] the Art Gallery of Ontario,[25] and the Burnaby Art Gallery.[26]
Kenojuak became the first Inuit artist inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame in 2001, and travelled to Toronto with her daughter, Silaqi, to attend the ceremony.[23]
Up until her death, Kenojuak contributed annually to the Cape Dorset Annual Print Release and continued to create new works.[20][19] She was one of the last living artists from the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative.
A CBC report of Kenojuak's death characterized her as a person of unfeigned humility and simplicity:
Okpik Pitseolak, an artist from Cape Dorset who knew her personally, said Kenojuak Ashevak brought Inuit art to the world but was "very humble about her work." Pitseolak said that when she appeared on the radio to talk about her art, she didn't want to come across "as someone who brags" about it. But she was "thankful for the fact that she was given this gift."[27] — CBC News
Since her death, prices for Kenojuak's work have reached new records, including $59,000CAD paid for a copy of Rabbit Eating Seaweed.[28]
Recognized the world over, winner of numerous awards and even the subject of a film and book, Kenojuak Ashevak remains Canada's best-known and most popular artist, bringing Inuit art to the world. Her works, with their vibrant colors and singular shapes, reveal her perception of the environment and its beauty, which she expresses intuitively, embodying a spirit of positivity: “I am an owl, I am a happy owl. I like to make people happy and everything happy. I am the light of happiness”. In her past quest to represent beauty and transmit happiness and positive vibes, Kenojuak has succeeded in gaining international recognition for her art, enabling Inuit culture and art to be recognized by all in a context of reaffirmation of Inuit identity, whose culture had long been ignored and denied.
Style
Kenojuak described her work thus in 1980:
"I just take these things out of my thoughts and out of my imagination, and I don't really give any weight to the idea of its being an image of something.... I am just concentrating on placing it down on paper in a way that is pleasing to my own eye, whether it has anything to do with subjective reality or not. And that is how I have always tried to make my images, and that is still how I do it, and I haven't really thought about it any other way than that. That is just my style, and is the way I started and the way I am today."[29]
Stained glass
In 2004, Kenojuak designed a stained glass window for a chapel at Appleby College in Oakville, Ontario. The window, of an Arctic char along with an owl against a vibrantly blue background, is the first such window made by an Inuit artist; it was suggested by two Biblical stories in which Jesus feeds a large crowd of people with two fish and a few loaves of bread, which for Kenojuak thoroughly embodied the spirit of the Inuit community, where food is always shared. The window was dedicated by Andrew Atagotaaluk, Bishop of the Arctic, on November 9, 2004, celebrating the 75th anniversary of John Bell Chapel.[30]
In 1992, she was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Toronto.[39]
In 1993, Canada Post featured 1969 drawing The Owl on a stamp for its Masterpieces of Canadian Art series.[29]
In 1999, a famous piece of hers, the "Red Owl" was featured on the April issue of the 1999 Millennium quarter series. Her initials in Inuktitut were on the left of the design, the first time the language had appeared on circulation coinage.
The search engine Google showed a special doodle on its Canadian home page on October 3, 2014, for Kenojuak Ashevak's 87th Birthday.[41]
On October 19, 2016, a Heritage Minute was released by Historica Canada. For the first time ever, the Heritage Minute is also narrated in a language other than French or English, in this case Inuktitut. Her granddaughter narrates the Heritage Minute, as well as appearing in it with her family. It was premiered in Cape Dorset, Nunavut, where it was also filmed.[42]
1992, archival and contemporary footage of Kenojuak was featured in Momentum, Canada's film for Expo '92.[45]
Legacy
In 2020, Cape Dorset Fine Arts organized the touring exhibition Kenojuak Ashevak: Life and Legacy.[5]
Record sale prices
At the Heffel Auction, Post-War & Contemporary Art, November 20, 2024, LOT 008, The Enchanted Owl, stonecut on paper
24 x 26 in, 61 x 66 cm, Estimate: $125,000 - $175,000 CAD, Sold for: $289,250 (including Buyer's Premium).[46]
^Leroux, Odette (1991). "Kenojuak Ashevak, Inuit". Steinbrueck Native Gallery. Archived from the original on February 16, 2013. Retrieved January 9, 2013.
^ abcde"Kenojuak". Archived from the original on July 3, 2008. Retrieved January 9, 2013., Native American Rhymes, Rhodes Educational Publications, 2005. Accessed 8 January 2013.
^National Film Board, Eskimo Artist: KenojuakArchived 2013-01-18 at the Wayback Machine, 1963 documentary by filmmaker John Feeney, narrated in English (19 min. 50 sec.). Accessed 9 January 2013.
^ ab"Kenojuak Ashevak". DORSET FINE ARTS. Archived from the original on October 22, 2017. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
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