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Artworks
GEORGE ARLUK (1949-2023) ARVIAT (ESKIMO POINT)
Hooded Figure, early 1970sstone, 5.5 x 3.75 x 2.75 in (14 x 9.5 x 7 cm)
unsigned.
LOT 4
ESTIMATE: $1,200 — $1,800
Further images
George Arluk was born near Arviat but spent a number of his childhood years in Rankin Inlet. The precocious Arluk began carving at the tender age of nine; as a...George Arluk was born near Arviat but spent a number of his childhood years in Rankin Inlet. The precocious Arluk began carving at the tender age of nine; as a teenager he was influenced by John Kavik and especially John Tiktak. After his move to Arviat in the late 1960s the still impressionable young Arluk became a great admirer of the artists Lucy Tasseor and John Pangnark. By the mid-1970s Arluk had found his own voice and began carving works that are indelibly stamped with his own uniquely modern take on the Keewatin style. This splendid early work shows the strong early influence of Pangnark and should in fact be seen as an homage to the older artist. Unsigned, it was actually attributed to Pangnark for some time.
Literature: For fine early “homage” works by Arluk see Walker’s Auctions, Ottawa, Nov. 2012, Lot 2; Nov. 2015, Lot 35. See also Bernadette Driscoll, Rankin Inlet/Kangirlliniq (Winnipeg Art Gallery, 1981), cats. 5-13. For works in Arluk’s mature style see Images of the North, George Arluk: The Song in the Stone (San Francisco: 1979); George Swinton, Sculpture of the Inuit (Toronto: M&S, 1972/92), figs. 835, 859, 904; Gerald McMaster ed., Inuit Modern: The Samuel and Esther Sarick Collection (Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario, 2010), pp. 128-129.
Provenance
Inuit Gallery of Vancouver;
Acquired from the above by Fred and Mary Widding, Ithaca, NY, Nov. 2002.
Exhibitions
Vancouver, Inuit Gallery of Vancouver, Core Inuit (Vancouver, 2002), cat. 8;
Ithaca, NY, Handwerker Gallery, Gannett Center, Ithaca College, Of the People; Inuit Sculpture from the Collection of Mary and Fred Widding, 26 February - 6 April 2008, cat. no. 2, as "John Pangnark" [sic].
Publications
Cheryl Kramer & Lillian R. Shafer eds., Of the People; Inuit Sculpture from the Collection of Mary and Fred Widding, exh. cat., (Ithaca, NY: Handwerker Gallery, Gannett Center, Ithaca College, 2008), reproduced, cat. no. 2, as "John Pangnark" [sic]