-
Artworks
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:Installation at Moscow's Pushkin Museum featuring the present lot (upper centre right).
UNIDENTIFIED ARTIST, INUKJUAK (PORT HARRISON)
Mother and Child, with Fish and Ulu, c. 1953stone, bone, ivory, black inlay, soap inlay, and thread, 7.25 x 4.5 x 3 in (18.4 x 11.4 x 7.6 cm)
unsigned.LOT 76
ESTIMATE: $12,000 — $18,000
PRICE REALIZED: $28,800.00Further images
So far, the artist who carved this important and much published masterpiece of early Inukjuak art remains unidentified. Tantalizingly, Darlene Coward Wight has attributed another fine work in the collection...So far, the artist who carved this important and much published masterpiece of early Inukjuak art remains unidentified. Tantalizingly, Darlene Coward Wight has attributed another fine work in the collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery to the same unknown artist, an attribution with which we wholeheartedly agree (see Early Masters, 2006, p. 98). More recently, Wight has tentatively attributed a similar, contemporaneous but less refined work to Noah Qinuajua of Puvirnituq [1], but we are inclined to stick with a yet-to-be-identified Inukjuak master for the present sculpture.
As Jean Blodgett rightly points out in the Robertson Collection catalogue (p. 60), this Mother and Child conveys a “formidable presence.” Indeed, this relatively small sculpture is impressive not only in its commanding sculptural form but also in its wealth of its beautiful and lavish detail. The richness and workmanship in the delineation of the woman’s parka trim; the beauty and precision of the carved fish and ulu; and especially the delicate yet powerful rendering of the facial features (especially the mother’s wonderful tattoo marks) are all separately superb. In combination, they are nothing short of spectacular.
1. Wight, Creation and Transformation, 2012, cat. 10.
References: For a very similar work from Inukjuak (unidentified but attributed to the same artist by Wight) see Darlene Coward Wight, Early Masters: Inuit Sculpture 1949-1955, (Winnipeg: Winnipeg Art Gallery, 2006), p. 98, For another work see also Darlene Wight, The Swinton Collection of Inuit Art, (Winnipeg, Winnipeg Art Gallery, 1987), cat. 2, also ill. in Wight, Early Masters, 2006, p. 101 and Darlene Coward Wight, Creation and Transformation: Defining Moments in Inuit Art, (Winnipeg: Winnipeg Art Gallery, 2012), cat. 10, in which the work is tentatively attributed to Noah Qinuajua of Puvirnituq; see also Ingo Hessel, Arctic Spirit: Inuit Art from the Albrecht Collection at the Heard Museum, (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre / Phoenix: Heard Museum, 2006), cat. 34.Provenance
Collection of John and Mary Robertson, Ottawa, acquired in the 1950s. By Descent to the present Private Collection, B.C.Exhibitions
Canadian Eskimo Arts Council, organizers, Sculpture / Inuit: Masterworks of the Canadian Arctic, travelling exh., Vancouver, Vancouver Art Gallery, 9 Nov 1971 - 9 Dec 1971; Paris, France, Le Grand Palais, 10 Feb - 2 April 1972; Copenhagen, Nationalmuseet, 26 April - 28 May 1972; Saint Petersburg [Leningrad], The Hermitage, 29 June -23 July 1972; Moscow, Pushkin Fine Arts Museum, 10 Aug - 10 Sept 1972; London, UK, Burlington Gardens Museum, 5 October - 10 Dec 1972; Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Museum of Art, - 24 Jan 1972- 4 March 1973; Ottawa, National Museum of Man, [?]; Ottawa, National Gallery of Canada, 18 May 1973- 17 June 1973, cat 293;
Kingston, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Selections from The John and Mary Robertson Collection of Inuit Sculpture, 20 July -19 October 1986, cat. 39.
Publications
Canadian Eskimo Arts Council, Sculpture / Inuit: Masterworks of the Canadian Arctic, (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1971), cat. 293;
George Swinton, Sculpture of the Inuit, (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1972/92), fig. 295.
Cottie Burland, Eskimo Art (London, U.K.: Hamlyn, 1973), reproduced p. 82;
Jean Blodgett, Selections from The John and Mary Robertson Collection of Inuit Sculpture, (Kingston: Agnes Etherington Art Centre, 1986), cat. 39, reproduced p. 60.
Join our mailing list
* denotes required fields
We will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.