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Artworks
OSUITOK IPEELEE, R.C.A. (1922-2005) KINNGAIT (CAPE DORSET
Caribou Composition, c. 1968-70stone, 13.5 x 8 x 5 in (34.3 x 20.3 x 12.7 cm)
signed, "ᐅᓱᐃᑐ".LOT 35
ESTIMATE: $25,000 — $35,000
PRICE REALIZED: $24,000.00Further images
In Sharon Van Raalte’s appreciation of the man and artist Osuitok in the Royal Academy of Art exhibition catalogue, she writes, Unlike the stereotype of the Inuit artist looking into...In Sharon Van Raalte’s appreciation of the man and artist Osuitok in the Royal Academy of Art exhibition catalogue, she writes,
Unlike the stereotype of the Inuit artist looking into the stone to see the form struggling to be released, Osuitok walks the corridors of his own imagination. His images come during dream time, flowing from the trance-like state between two worlds – messengers from another reality. They wait, like seeds promising life, until he finds a piece of stone that will carry their projection [1].
We cannot think of a more apt description of Osuitok’s art as it applies to this remarkable, lyrical image. Much has been made of Osuitok’s idealized yet naturalistic portrayals of animal and human subjects – especially his famous caribou – and rightly so. Sculptures like Walking Caribou (First Arts, 13 July 2021); Rearing Caribou with Nursing Calf (First Arts, 5 December 2022, Lot 43; and Fisherwoman (First Arts, 28 May 2019, Lot 28) are staggeringly beautiful and technical marvels. With Caribou Composition we get to appreciate Osuitok’s imagination in a whole new light. Carved at the end of a decade of spectacular artistic flowering in Cape Dorset, the sculpture seems to harken back to the early 1960s when sculptors and graphic artists alike (but perhaps most notably Kenojuak) were creating marvelous flowing, dreamy images of spirits and animals.
Caribou Composition does indeed seem to flow from a “trance-like” state of mind. Osuitok’s charming menagerie – caribou, hare, owl and other birds, bear, seal – does not look or feel like a group-portrait; instead, the image comes across as dream-like, even visionary. Here Osuitok aims not for precision and mastery of the stone, but rather for poetry and magic. This sculpture is truly, quite literally enchanting.
1. Sharon Van Raalte, “Osuitok Ipeelee,” p. 42
References: For a contemporaneous work by the artist, in the same stone and similarly styled but with very different imagery, see Waddington’s, Toronto, April 2005 (Klamer Collection), Lot 107. For a discussion of Osuitok’s life and work see Jean Blodgett, “Osuitok Ipeelee” in Alma Houston, ed., Inuit Art: An Anthology, (Winnipeg: Watson & Dwyer, 1988), pp. 42-55. For the fine article on the sculpture of Osuitok Ipeelee see John Westren, “A Quest for the Real: The Art of Osuitok Ipeelee,” Inuit Art Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 4, Winter 2021, pp. 42-51.Provenance
Collection of Terry Ryan, Kinngait / Toronto;
Feheley Fine Arts, Toronto;
Purchased from the above by John and Joyce Price, Seattle.Exhibitions
Toronto, John B. Aird Gallery, Christopher Chapman / Osuitok Ipeelee Indigenous People: A New Partnership, 8-30 Oct 1993, cat. VII.
This two-person exhibition featured the sculptures of Osuitok and the photographs of the Canadian filmmaker Christopher Chapman.Publications
Royal Canadian Academy of Arts / Sharon Van Raalte, Christopher Chapman / Osuitok Ipeelee Indigenous People: A New Partnership, (Oakville, ON: Mosaic Press, 1993), cat. VII, unpaginated.