JOHN TIKTAK, R.C.A. (1916-1981) KANGIQLINIQ (RANKIN INLET)
signed and inscribed with artist's disc number, "ᑎᑕ / E1-266".
LOT 23
ESTIMATE: $20,000 — $30,000
PRICE REALIZED: $24,000.00
Further images
This is a rare work by Tiktak, one of the very few examples of mothers and children in which the parent and child are facing and/or embracing each other; scenes of couples greeting each other seem marginally more common. In fact only one other example immediately comes to mind: a Mother and Child from c. 1966 in the Sarick Collection at the AGO (see reference). It’s a charming, quite engaging scene from an artist whose work is usually considered quite sober. We are uncertain if the mother and her child are meeting in an embrace, or if the child is trying to pull away, as children are sometimes wont to do. Either way the effect is playful, even boisterous. We love the way that the child turns its head to engage the viewer (or ask for help!).
The informal mood of Mother and Child is reinforced by the slightly robust carving style. Tiktak happily leaves behind the marks of his tools: bore holes, rasp and file marks, and saw cuts are all in evidence. The negative spaces are created by four round holes of different sizes, two to define the figures’ legs, one to define the arms, and another large one to separate the two torsos. The holes are perhaps Tiktak’s most brilliant sculptural invention, akin to Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth’s famous pierced forms. In this work the largest hole boldly animates the entire composition, simultaneously separating the two figures and binding them together. There is almost a feeling of elasticity, adding to the sculpture’s palpable sense of movement and energy. Fantastic.
Provenance
Private Collection, Toronto.Join our mailing list
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