#inuit art

LIVE

Not explorer related, but just a few reminders of why it’s so important for Inuit communities to have a say in how the archaeology of the Franklin wrecks is conducted and artifacts displayed.

I love seeing the Inuit artifacts in Canadian museums that are so sorely lacking in US ones, so my trip to see the new Erebus artifacts was, of course, also one to see the rest of the museum. With a modern focus on indigenous rights, museums are more willing to display artifacts that may have been nationally embarrassing years ago. Like these. The soapstone carving depicts a provincial officer shooting sled dogs, which was apparently supposed to encourage the Inuit to remain sedentary and part of French/ Anglo civilization (the logic of that escapes me as well). I was unaware of this until I saw the carving, but it was apparently a practice from the 1950s through the 1970s( 60s?). The next picture is even more unsettling as it reminds me of the yellow stars during the holocaust. Those are Inuit ID tags, and were supposed to be worn as a means of identifying the number of Inuit living in a province. I’m not sure if they were to be worn constantly or by those being relocated (anyone know more? This info is new to me becasue it was swept under the rug for so long and therefore not a part of any culture or archaeology book). Whatever the case, the existence of those things is disturbing to me. Especially since they were a part of a massive relocation and ’re-education’ program that involved taking children from their families and putting them in poor quality boarding schools.

The quote was in a display, and it really sums up why being able to handle all aspects of history is important to the people living on the land. Not too much to ask considering what came before.

 Karoo Ashevak (1940 – 1974, Inuit), Spirit, c.1972 – 1974, Bone, baleen and stone 38.1 x 20.3 x 10.

Karoo Ashevak (1940 – 1974, Inuit), Spirit, c.1972 – 1974, Bone, baleen and stone 38.1 x 20.3 x 10.2 cm, Museum of Inuit Art, Toronto, Canada


Post link
I recently started a new internship working for a local art conservator who specializes in objects a

I recently started a new internship working for a local art conservator who specializes in objects and I’m loving every moment of it!

In this image, we are testing various solvents to remove the tape adhesive residue on the back of an Inuit sculpture.


Post link
loading