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Artworks
PAUTA SAILA, R.C.A. (1916-2009) KINNGAIT (CAPE DORSET)
Dancing Bear on Base, 1988patinated bronze mounted on a stone base, 11.75 x 9.5 x 5 in (29.8 x 24.1 x 12.7 cm)
inscribed with artist's signature, Art Bronzes International’s mark, and editioned in the matrix, "ᐸᐅᑕ / A B I / 19/500" [1].LOT 41
ESTIMATE: $3,000 — $5,000Further images
In 1989, Art Bronzes International undertook a project titled The Canadian Contemporary Sculpture Collection, of which this bear was one of the first eight works created. While the work is...In 1989, Art Bronzes International undertook a project titled The Canadian Contemporary Sculpture Collection, of which this bear was one of the first eight works created. While the work is noted as being from the edition of 500, in conversation with First Arts, Art Bronzes international shared that this edition was never completed [1]. The actual number of works produced remains unknown. Given the rarity with which these bears appear on the market, we speculate the run was quite small.
At first glance, with its richly mottled tones, lustrous surface, and convincing sense of weight, this Dancing Bear could easily be misread as a carving in dark chlorite rather than what it truly is: a meticulously patinated and waxed cast bronze.
A familiar and iconic subject for Pauta, this charming fellow is captured mid-motion, his energy captured in time through the enduring medium of bronze. Not only does it retain all the spirit and charm of Pauta’s finest stone works but by rendering the form in bronze, Inuit art is placed in a broader sculptural tradition; one where bronze has long been the material of permanence, legacy, and artistic canon.
1. Art Bronzes International telephone call with First Arts, 20 March 2022.
References: The author gratefully acknowledges Mark London for his contributions to the cataloguing of this work and for initiating the phone call to Art Bronzes International. The firm also published a catalogue: Art Bronzes International, The Canadian Contemporary Sculpture Collection, (sn [Art Bronzes International], sl: Georgetown?, 1989). The Pauta is illustrated on p. 7 and dated 1988. The bronze Pauta, along with others, can be seen in a number of adverts in various magazines, including Canadian Art, Spring 1989, Vol. 6, No. 1, p. 73.Provenance
Private Collection, Toronto;
Estate of the above.
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