Artist served as Chronicler of days gone by.Joe Talirunili was born in northern Quebec near Kuujjuaraapik on the shores of the Hudson Bay Hudson Bay, inland sea of North America, c.475,000 sq mi (1,230,000 sq km), c.850 mi (1,370 km) long and c.650 mi (1,050 km) wide, E central Canada. Hudson Bay and James Bay (its southern extension) and all their islands border Nunavut Territory, Manitoba, Ontario, . There are differing accounts as to the year of his birth. Government records show he was born in January 1899, but he claimed to have been born in 1906. In either case, he was present to experience the traditional life lived by the Inuit in the area, and to witness firsthand first·hand adj. Received from the original source: firsthand information. first the changes that would come as his people became more and more influenced by the outside world. Talirunili grew up around the Great Whale River The Great Whale River (French: Grande rivière de la Baleine) is a 724 km long river in Nunavik, Quebec, Canada. It flows from Lac Bienville west to Hudson Bay. Its drainage area encompasses 42,700 km² and its average discharge is about 680 cubic metres per second. and the Richmond Gulf, joining his father in the hunt and living in the traditional Inuit way. But as time went on the Inuit had more and more dealings with the white men who came from the south. That interaction brought with it many changes to the way the Inuit lived their lives. In some ways Talirunili embraced the changes. He gladly used the rifles introduced by the white men who came to the area to ensure greater success in the hunt. He found work as a guide for people from the south who came to the area to trap and also found work in the mining sector. His was the first family in the community of Povungnituk to live in a pre-fabricated house. But he also stuck to the old ways, trapping, hunting and fishing to put food on the table. Talirunili had a reputation of being a good, caring man who was always ready to share what he had with others. He could be counted on to provide visitors to his home with food and to entertain them with the stories he had to tell. From his encounters with western culture, Talirunili learned the power of paper, of how it could be used to capture and share information. Seeing the possibilities this new medium offered as a way of recording stories about the old ways and passing them on to others, Talirunili became one of the first Inuit in the area to try his hand at printmaking printmaking Art form consisting of the production of images, usually on paper but occasionally on fabric, parchment, plastic, or other support, by various techniques of multiplication, under the direct supervision of or by the hand of the artist. , an art form that involved carving an image in stone and using it to print copies of the original piece of art. While in some areas of the north where printmaking was introduced one artist would draw a picture and another would carve it into the stone, in Povungnituk, artists like Talirunili would usually create the image directly on the stone. In the late 1950s, Talirunili and his cousin, fellow artist Davidialuk Amittu, helped found the Povungnituk print shop, where artists from the community worked to create prints reflecting the Inuit way of life. The print shop closed in 1989 but was resurrected late last year, allowing a new generation of artists a chance to learn carving and printmaking. In his work, Talirunili captured a way of life his people lived when he was young, before the influences of white society had changed it irrevocably. His efforts to capture these images of days gone by earned him the title of The Chronicler. In his carvings, drawings and stone-cut prints, he created images of hunting scenes and figures of Inuit people, often adding descriptions to the drawings written in syllabics to explain what was going on in the scene depicted. He also liked to draw and carve owls and his renderings of these creatures could be found in many of his creations. But Talirunili is probably best known for the great number of carvings through which he retold re·told v. Past tense and past participle of retell. a tale from his childhood. A very young Talirunili was among a group of family members and friends who were returning to their camp on the mainland after celebrating his baptism on an island in Hudson Bay when the ice over which their sleds were travelling began to break up and they became trapped on an ice floe. Working quickly to complete the task before the ice under them melted and plunged them into the icy waters, the stranded travellers used the wood from the sleds and the sealskins on hand to fashion a boat that could get them to shore. It's estimated that Talirunili created 25 to 30 carvings depicting this adventure. Each of these pieces has come to be known by the same name--Migration. The treacherous journey depicted in the Migration works was just one of many adventures and adversities Talirunili experienced during his lifetime and many of these other experiences found their way into his work as well. During one voyage Talirunili took in his Peterhead boat with his son Joshua and seven others, the boat smashed into a reef and was destroyed. Talirunili salvaged what he could from the wreckage to fashion another craft. The new boat, which relied on a 10-gallon keg, a large wash basin and a tea kettle to keep it afloat, proved seaworthy sea·wor·thy adj. sea·wor·thi·er, sea·wor·thi·est Fit to traverse the seas: a seaworthy freighter; a seaworthy crew. and allowed Talirunili and his son to join other survivors of the accident who had managed to swim to a nearby island. A family of four--a father, mother and two of their children--had also tried to swim to shore and had perished during the attempt. Talirunili chronicled that experience in his carving Near Death in Boat. The piece shows the boat, the 10-gallon keg in the back, and Talirunili and his son paddling pad·dling n. 1. The act of moving a boat by means of a paddle. 2. A spanking or beating with a paddle. Paddling of ducks: a company of ducks on water—Lipton, 1970. , Joshua safely ensconced en·sconce tr.v. en·sconced, en·sconc·ing, en·sconc·es 1. To settle (oneself) securely or comfortably: She ensconced herself in an armchair. 2. within the wash basin. Talirunili died on Sept. 11, 1976. In the year proceeding his death, he produced an incredible number of carvings, including a number of new versions of Migration. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] His work has been featured in exhibitions across Canada Across Canada was an afternoon program that formerly aired on The Weather Network. The segment ran from early 1999 until mid 2002. The show ran from 3:00PM ET until 7:00 PM ET. and the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. and pieces of his art can be found in museums and art galleries across the country. In 1978 one of his Migration sculptures was reproduced on a Canadian fourteen-cent postage stamp postage stamp, government stamp affixed to mail to indicate payment of postage. The term includes stamps printed or embossed on postcards and envelopes as well as the adhesive labels. . Talirunili's art was in the news again recently after one of his many Migration carvings sold at an art auction for what is believed to be the highest price ever paid for an Inuit sculpture. An unidentified Canadian bidder bought the sculpture for $278,500 during the April 24 auction at Waddington's auction house in Toronto. What sets this Migration carving apart from the two dozen or more Talirunili created is that, while most of the carvings depict the passengers in the boat as human, for this carving he chose to populate To plug in chips or components into a printed circuit board. A fully populated board is one that contains all the devices it can hold. the craft with animals--rabbits, an owl and a wolf. In 1999 the auction house had sold another carving in the Migration series that featured animal passengers, this time owls and a dog. That carving sold for $50,600, a price that at that time was believed to the highest price paid at auction for an Inuit carving. Two years later yet another Migration carving was sold at auction by Waddington's, again fetching fetch·ing adj. Very attractive; charming: a fetching new hairstyle. fetch ing·ly adv. a record-setting price, $87,500.
Another version of Talirunili's Migration carving, part of the TD Bank Financial Group's collection of Inuit art Prehistoric period Around 4000 BC nomads crossed over the Bering Strait from Siberia into the Canadian Arctic, Greenland, and Newfoundland. Very little remains of them, and only a few preserved artifacts carved in ivory could be considered works of art. , is featured in the exhibit ItuKiagatta!--a word from the Labrador Inuit that means "How it amazes us!" The exhibit premiered at the National Gallery of Canada National Gallery of Canada National art museum founded in Ottawa in 1880. Its holdings include extensive collections of Canadian art as well as important European works. Its nucleus was formed with the donation of diploma works by members of the Royal Canadian Academy. in April 2005 and has since travelled the country, showing in Winnipeg, Halifax and Edmonton. ItuKiagatta! is showing at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria is a Canadian art gallery located in Victoria, British Columbia. Opened in 1951, the gallery possesses notable works by artists such as Emily Carr, and has one of Canada's most significant collections of Asian art. until June 11 and will have its next showing at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (French: Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal) is a major art museum in Montreal, Canada. It was founded in 1860, making it Canada's oldest art institution. from June 29 until Oct. 22. |
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