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Dear friends,

Please visit us in person or online to see our new acquisitions. Of course, we can only highlight a fraction of our selections in newsletters and on the website. If you are looking for a particular artist, subject or community, please contact us and we will be happy to assist you.

Will be on view through February 28, 2015

 


 

"Thirty from the Sixties" presents thirty prints from the first decade of Inuit printmaking. The 1960s were a time for experimentation with new media and new techniques. The collection includes both naive and sophisticated images, and both hyper-realistic and wildly fantastic images. Cape Dorset is represented by twenty-five prints created by fifteen different artists, including Kenojuak Ashevak, Kananginak Pootoogook, Parr, Pitseolak Ashoona, Lucy Qinnuayuaq, Pudlo Pudlat and Kiakshuk. Povungnituk is represented by four prints created by Davidialuk Alasua Amittu and two other artists, and Iqaluit is represented by a single print by Henry Evaluardjuk

 

 

Most of the prints are stonecuts -- prints produced by carving a negative image into the flat surface of a stone, inking the stone, and pressing the paper directly onto the stone. Most of the remaining prints are stencils -- prints produced by cutting the areas to be colored out of a template, placing the template over the paper, and applying ink through the openings in the template. (Although the stencils are frequently labelled "sealskin stencil," sealskin was never the material used for the template. The templates were waxed or oiled cardboard.) A small number of prints were engravings, and Henry Evaluardjuk's print is a linocut -- the same as a stonecut, except that the negative image was carved into a linoleum floor tile.


 

Each medium encouraged the artists to use different techniques. Stonecuts were initially black-and-white, and lent themselves to bold patterns. See Kiakshuk's Owl Attacking Snow Goose (top) for highly sophisticated contrasting patterns and textures. Artists soon learned that multiple colors could be applied to the stone, as in Pitseolak Ashoona's Man Repairing Sledge (right). Stencils lent themselves to expanses of color, often with subtle shading. See Pudlo Pudlat's Proud Walrus (above). Some prints, such as Lucy Qinnuayuak's Man Wants a Seal, combined both stencil and stonecut techniques.  Engravings allowed the artist to depict very fine details.  See Quvianiatuliak Parr's Near the Floe Edge.


 

Povungnituk prints differed from Cape Dorset prints in several respects. Early Povungnituk prints used the whole stone, and printed the stone out to and including the edge.  This accounts for the irregular outline of Annie Mikpigak's Hunting and Davidialuk's Big Owl Carries off an Eskimo (left).  In addition, in Povungnituk, the artist who designed the print also cut the stone.  

 

In Cape Dorset, in many cases one artist designed the print, and another artist cut the stone and pulled the print.  The influence of the printmaker can be seen by comparing the three prints by Parr in this exhibit. Walrus Hunt was printed by Lukta Qiatsuq, Children Chasing Dogs (below) was printed by Iyola Kingwatsiak, and Seal Hunter was printed by Timothy Ottochie.  (Iyola and Timothy both have their own prints in the exhibit.) All three capture the spikiness of Parr's pencil drawings, but Timothy presents a softer outline and detailing than the other two.  He also uses solid color to emphasize the seal and the spear, while Lukta has no solid areas in Walrus Hunt, and Iyola uses solid black very sparingly, for one child's arms and legs.

 
The thirty images can be previewed by clicking here.

 

 

 

We've already turned the page to February, but it's not too late to get your Cape Dorset 2015 Calendars

 
 
About Us

 

Alaska on Madison is a gallery of indigenous art of Alaska and Canada run by collectors for collectors. We feature Inuit art of the twentieth and twenty-first century Canadian Arctic,  two-thousand-year-old objects from the Old Bering Sea cultures, and nineteenth century art from the Northwest Coast peoples and Yup'ik Eskimos. Our collection ranges from museum-quality works to more modest but still excellent works for private collectors, whether novice or sophisticated. We also have a selection of books that will enhance your appreciation of your collection. 

 

Baffled by syllabic signatures? Learn how to interpret them by using our guide, Deciphering Inuktitut Signatures, and our Inuit Artist Search Tool.

 

Regular gallery hours are Tuesday - Saturday 1:30 - 6:00 pm, but it's always a good idea to call or email in advance in case we have an appointment out of the gallery.  


 

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Alaska on Madison | 1065 Madison Avenue, Second Floor | Between 80th and 81st Streets | New York | NY | 10028