Malaya Akulukjuk

Malaya Akulukjuk was an Inuit artist who drew works inspired by her life as a shaman and Inuit spirituality through depictions of human-animal transformations. Akulukjuk was born in 1915 (though some sources state 1912 and 1921), and lived a traditional Inuit life in the Qikiqtat Camp of Nunavut before moving to Pangnirtung on Baffin Island in 1962.[1] Her career as an artist started later than most, at the age of 51.[2]

In 1969, the Canadian Federal Department of Indian and Northern Affairs opened the Pangnirtung Weave Shop with the aim of creating a craft industry in the community.[3] With Akulukjuk's guidance her drawings were translated onto the woven tapestries by fellow members of the Pangnirtung Weave Shop. Many of Akulukjuk's works were inspired by her memories of traditional life which revolve around camping and family gatherings, and the others were rooted from her imagination of mystical creatures.[4]

A large collection of Akulukjuk's drawings went on exhibitions across Canada. Some of Akulukjuk's pieces such as Inuit Ways (1979) and Hunting Polar Bears with Harpoon (1982) are displayed in the National Gallery of Canada and various museums across the country.[4] The Heffel Gallery, one of Canada's fine art auction houses, sells Akulukjuk's works as well as the tapestries of weaver Agah Etooangat based on Akulukjuk's drawings.[5] Akulukjuk's art is crucial to the development of Inuit weaving tapestry by visualizing the old Inuit life and shamanism.

Early life

Malaya Akulukjuk was born in Quikitat Camp (a former Whaling station) in 1915 (though some sources state 1912 and 1921).[6] She married at the age of twenty. In the Inuit society, arranged marriages were a tradition to ensure all marriageable adults could have partners during their childbearing years.[7] Akukuljuk became a mother to thirteen children. While pregnant, she continued hunting and participating in land.[8] She moved later to the settlement in Pangnirtung on Baffind Island with her husband and children in 1960.[9]

Personal Life and Family

Akulukjuk got married at the early age of twenty, which was much against her will.[10] In the Inuit society, arranged marriages was a tradition to ensure that all marriageable adults could have partners during their childbearing years.[11] Akulukjuk became a mother of thirteen children, but she did not give up hunting in her pregnancy, and sometimes she went hunting by carrying a baby in her hood.[10] Akulukjuk's late husband, Nutaralaq Akulukjuk, was a sculpture artist.[12] Several of his works had been sold at auctions, including Man Drinking sold at Waddington's Inuit Art Online Auction in 2017.[12] Many of Akulukjuk's children became future artists in Pangnirtung, including five of her sons, Jeetaloo, Geeshee, Juelee, Enukee and Moar. Her daughter, May Lonsdale, developed into a graphic artist.[13] In Akulukjuk's adult life, she suffered from poor eyesight, and sometimes she had to use magnifying glasses to create paintings.[14]

Pioneer Artist at the Pangnirtung Tapestry Studio

The Aboriginal people of the Canadian Arctic have led a semi-nomadic lifestyle for centuries by living off the land. This nomadic lifestyle meant there was no continuous center for economic and community life. During the Resettlement Period in the 1960s, Canada's Inuit were relocated changing their lifestyle significantly.[15] To aid in this process the Canadian government funded art and crafts initiatives across the Arctic region and contracted companies to administer and run these programs. Karen Bulow LTD, a weaving company from Montreal, created the Pilot Weaving Program for the Pangnirtung community.[16] In 1970 the project manager Donald Stuart and three woman employees arrived to train and begin the program.[17]

The women quickly learned the hand-weaving techniques and moved onto the loom weaving creating linear patterns and items like sashes, hats and blankets.[18] Many of the woman being leaders in the community easily understood weaving partly because of the finger weaving introduced by missionaries in the 1930-40s and the traditional Inuit culture of creating clothing and everyday items out of items from the land.[19] In celebration of the centennial year of the Northwest Territories, Queen Elizabeth II visited Iqualuit and was given a Pangnirtung Weave Shop blanket. Stuart recalls the Queen remarking how cold it was and "that when the blanked was presented she put it on and wrapped it around her knees right away…" Prince Philip reached over to touch and she said "No, it’s mine!"[20]

The pilot weaving program was proving to be successful and positively impacting the surrounding community but the cost of running it the program too high for the small items being sold. The goods produced in the Pangnirtung Weave Shop did not have the ‘Inuit look’ which is what customers wanted from Northern goods.[17] The program directors looked to government initiatives and the markets for such goods and decided woven wall hangings or tapestries would be the best for economic profit of the program. To make the tapestries they needed original Inuit drawings to translate into the woven textiles. Stuart took paper and pens throughout the community asking elders if they wanted to draw.[17] Malaya Akulukjuk was one of the first artists discovered, she was 51.[21] Her drawings set the precedent of what types and style of art was to be showcased on the tapestries. Other artists included Annie Pitsiuluk, Annie Kilabuk and Elisapee Ishulutak.[22] The first exhibition of the Pangnirtung tapestries was on March 28, 1971 in Montreal. All 23 tapestries sold to private collectors and museums.[16]

The Pangnirtung Weave Shop was moved into the Uqqurmiut Inuit Artists Association Centre which created a central management of all arts and crafts. The centre merges the Print Shop, Tapestry Studio, Retail Craft Gallery and an office for administration under one roof. The creation of the Pangnirtung Weave Shop has been a successful and helpful tool bridging the gap between the Inuit living off the land and living in settlements. The art was a source of cultural identity and pride but also an economic source for the region.[23]

The Federal Development of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada in 2001 estimates that 20% of the Inuit derive part of their income from the arts and crafts programs. Without the work at the Weave Shop or other arts and crafts programs many would be solely reliant on social assistance money.[23]

Works and Shamanism

Unlike many other traditional cultures, women were significantly powerful in the Inuit religion because they took leading roles in spiritual matters. Although Malaya Akulukjuk did not openly acknowledge her identity, she was reputed as a shaman in the Pangnirtung community.[24] Shamans are people with special powers that enable them to act as a mediator between the spiritual world and the temporal world, and they have helping spirits to assist them with supernatural tasks. In Inuit communities, people believe that a shaman is able to maintain the spirit's favour by appropriately practicing her unique abilities, including her power of second sight, her "X-ray" vision, and her control of animal spirits.[25] Shamanism is based on the animistic belief that a helping spirit could exist in every being and take different forms, which are commonly seen in birds and polar bears.[26] In Akulukjuk's drawings, she adopts the role of "artist as shaman" by vividly portraying her access to the spiritual world which is filled with transformative animals and supernatural beings. Her spirit figures are rooted from her imagination and the stories she had heard in childhood.[27]

In 1972, Akulukjuk's drawing Oalopalik depicts a helping spirit, which could possibly be her own.[28] During an interview with Asia Papatsie, the Inuit elder confirmed that this helping spirit was a bird that acted as the shaman's eyes. In Inuit beliefs, such a spirit could fly over long distance and report to the shaman what it had seen.[29] In Akulukjuk's later artistic career, she started to depict complex themes with multiple characters, and those works continued to communicate her shamanistic beliefs. For instance, her drawing of Two Bears with Skin Frame in 1977 displays two polar bear spirits that live in a different dimension. These spirits are viewed as bear people, who hunt like the Inuit but usually live inside a paddle or a rock.[30] In this drawing, the bear people are stretching an animal skin that may have been later used to sew skin clothes.

Akulukjuk's other drawings involve human interactions with birds, and animal spirits that co-exist with humans on the Inuit landscapes. In her drawing Lady with Birds (1977), Akulukjuk depicts a girl who plays with her bird that she may has been tamed from a young age. The girl's hairstyle reveals that she is not married yet.[31] Here, Akulukjuk emphasizes the intimacy between human and animal spirits, which reflects her shamanistic practices because she has personal interactions with those spirits. In Akulukjuk's another drawing, Malaya’s Story (1981), Inuit people and animal spirits are depicted in the same space. While community members are preparing for hunting and food storage, the goose spirit is moving in his own directions. Akulukjuk presents her perspective as a shaman by visualizing the co-existence of everyday community life and the spiritual realm.

Community Life

In the Pangnirtung Tapestry Studio, the first generation of artists like Malaya Akulukjuk were mostly elders that had previously lived a traditional Inuit life.[32] Akulukjuk was growing up in a whaling station, and lived as a nomadic hunter during her early years.[33] When she adopted her artistic career, she viewed drawing as a way to pass on her rich knowledge of the "true Inuit life" to the younger generation.[34] After the resettlement, drawing was a coping strategy for Akulukjuk to fulfil her responsibility as an elder. In the Tapestry Studio, the weavers are usually young girls in their early twenties and they learned the Inuit past from the elders by transforming their drawings into tapestries.[35]

In the Inuit Quarterly, the writer states that Inuit elders produce "memory art" instead of commercial art.[36] The elders were eager to tell stories of the past and traditional lifestyles because they were afraid of losing their own identity to the western cultural invasions. Akulukjuk enjoyed using her imagination and memories to present Inuit life of her youth, as well as natural landscapes with tiny human or animal figures. Many of her drawings reconstruct traditional Inuit community life. In 1981, the tapestry of Malaya’s Story demonstrated that the Inuit people used the whale's body to store food and make tools. They also used sled dogs for transportation, and carried some weapons in their hands when they went out hunting.[37] The other painting, Children at Summer Camp (1980) revealed that Inuit people lived in sealskin tents during the summer. The young couple lives in a smaller tent that has seal skin boots drying on the poles, while the older couple lives in a bigger tent with a wooden door. The door indicates that the old couple has high status in their community (they are suggested to be prominent hunters) because wood is a very precious resource in the Inuit society.[38]

Akulukjuk's drawings also present her knowledge of land and wildlife in a practical sense. Some of her drawings are purely landscapes scenes of the old Inuit territories, including Spring Breakup (1995), Camp Site (1995) and Inukshuk Trail (1995). These landscape drawings were created at the end of Akulukjuk's life. The artist was eager to go back to these campsites, but she could no longer go out on the land.[39] They revealed Akulukjuk's strong emotional connections and her long-lasting memories of the old Inuit lands. On the other hand, there are pure animal depictions such as Galloping Caribou (1994) and Playful Narwhales (1980) in Akulukjuk's drawings. These animals were commonly seen on the Inuit land, and they used to be the primary food resources for the survival of the community.

Cooperation Between Artists and Weavers

Tapestry weaving in Pangnirtung has always been a cooperative production that combined the skills of two parties, the drawing artists and the weavers.[40] The submission of the drawing is done by one artist, while the interpretation of the drawing into the medium of tapestry is produced by another artist of the weaving shop. The tapestry artist would choose the colours of the final production, which is rarely discussed with the drawing artist since weavers are believed to have more knowledge about the effective use of colours.[41] Many of Akulukjuk's drawings were made into tapestries by different weavers, and the final productions changed the colours, sizes, and proportions of her original drawings.

For instance, her drawing Children at Summer Camp (1980) was originally created with black and brown pen; while its rich and saturated colours were added by the tapestry artist, Kawtysee Kakee.[38] Moreover, the original drawing has more defined lines, which clearly demonstrate how children engage in everyday activities such as brewing tea and cooking meat. However, in the tapestry production, the surface becomes rough, and the depictions of food are less detailed. The tapestry artist focuses on mixing the soft colours of the wool with a lighter thread, which creates the glow of warm evening light. By creating this natural light, the image is given a sense of time as well as a nostalgic feeling of beauty.[38]

Akulukjuk's drawing, Spring Break (1995) is painted by coloured pencils, which depicts the scene of mountains, valleys and ice fields being lightened by the rising sun. Akulukjuk uses soft colours to portray this scene, including light yellow, blue and white. They create a dreamy atmosphere, and evokes the impression of a paradise rooted from the artist's memory. Compared to the original drawing, the tapestry production adds more layers of perspective to the flat surface by incorporating vivid colours as well as making the mountains look sharp and outstanding.

National and International Exhibitions

Akulukjuk's works have been exhibited in galleries across Canada, including the National Gallery, the Inuit Gallery of Vancouver, the Arts and Crafts Guild of Quebec, the University of Alberta. They even went overseas, and reached as far as the Jerusalem Artists House Museum.[24] Two of Akulukjuk's works, Inuit Ways (1979) and Hunting Polar Bears with Harpoon (1982) are displayed in the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa. The Heffel Gallery, one of Canada's fine art auction houses, sells Akulukjuk's works as well as the tapestries of weaver Agah Etooangat based on Akulukjuk's drawings.[42]

References

  1. Deborah, Hickman (2002). Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization. p. 7.
  2. Hickman, Deborah (1996). "Malaya Akulukjuk - A Tribute (Obituary)" (PDF). Inuit Art Quarterly. 11: 53–58. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
  3. Goldfarb, Beverly (1989). "Artists, Weavers, Movers and Shakers" (PDF). Inuit Art Quarterly. 11: 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
  4. Deborah, Hickman (2002). Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization. p. 63.
  5. "Malaya Akulukjuk and Agah Etooangat Sale Results". Heffel Fine Art Auction House. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  6. Hickman, Deborah (2003). "Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave". Canadian Parliamentary Review. 26 (1): 7.
  7. Billson, Janet Mancini; Mancini, Kyra (2007). Inuit Women: Their Powerful Spirit in a Century of Change. Lanham, Md: Rowan & Littlefield.
  8. Hickman, Deborah (2002). Tapestry: A Northern Legacy. In Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization. p. 52.
  9. Hickman, Deborah (2002). Tapestry: A Northern Legacy. In Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization. p. 53.
  10. Deborah, Hickman (2002). Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. 52. Montreal, Canada: Canadian Museum of Civilization. p. 52.
  11. Mancini, Janet and kyra (2007). Inuit Women: Their Powerful Spirit in a Century of Change. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 65.
  12. ""Nutaralaq Akulukjuk."". MutualArt. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  13. "Malaya Akulukjuk (1915-1995), Inuit Artist Biography and Portfolio". Spirit Wrestler Gallery. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  14. Deborah, Hickman (1996). "Malaya Akulukjuk - A Tribute (Obituary)" (PDF). Inuit Art Quarterly. 11: 53.
  15. Cross, L.D (2003). "Woven, Not Carved: The Pangnirtung Tapestries Are Northern Art With Global Appeal". Arctic. 56 (3): 310. doi:10.14430/arctic627.
  16. Watt, Virginia (1992). "Reflecting on Pangnirtung Weaving". Inuit Art Quarterly. 7 (3): 59.
  17. Watt, Virginia (1992). "Reflecting on Pangnirtung Weaving". Inuit Art Quarterly. 7 (3): 60.
  18. Cross, L.D. (2003). "Woven, Not Carved: The Pangnirtung Tapestries are Northern with Global Appeal". Arctic. 56 (3): 312. doi:10.14430/arctic627.
  19. Billson, Janet Mancini; Mancini, Kyra (2007). Inuit Women: Their Powerful Spirit in a Century of Change. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 70.
  20. Goldfarb, Beverly (1989). "Artists, Weavers, Movers and Shakers". Inuit Art Quarterly. 4 (2): 15.
  21. Hickman, Deborah (1996). "Malaya Akulukjuk- A Tribute (Obituary)". Inuit Art Quarterly. 11 (1): 56.
  22. Goldfarb, Beverly (1989). "Artists, Weavers, Movers and Shakers". Inuit Art Quarterly. 4 (2): 17.
  23. "Uqqurmiut Centre for Arts & Crafts".
  24. "Canadian women Artists History Initiative: Artist Database: Artists: Akulukjuk, Malaya". cwahi.concordia.ca. Canadian Women Artists History Initiative. 23 July 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2019.
  25. Emily E, Auger, The Way of Inuit Art: Aesthetics and History in and Beyond the Arctic (Jefferson, N.C: McFarland, 2005), 40.
  26. Swinton, George and William E. Taylor, "Prehistoric Doric Art: Discussion by an Archaeologist and an Artist." The Beaver, Autumn 1967: 42.
  27. "Malaya Akulukjuk (1915-1995), Inuit Artist Biography and Portfolio." Spirit Wrestler Gallery. http://www.spiritwrestler.com/catalog/index.php?artists_id=370 (accessed March 6, 2018)
  28. Deborah, Hickman. Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. (Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2002), 54.
  29. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 54.
  30. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 58.
  31. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 60.
  32. Maria von, Finckenstein. "…But I Always Think About the Old Days." In Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. (Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2002), 4.
  33. "Malaya Akulukjuk (1915-1995), Inuit Artist Biography and Portfolio." Spirit Wrestler Gallery. http://www.spiritwrestler.com/catalog/index.php?artists_id=370 (accessed March 6, 2018)
  34. Deborah, Hickman. "Tapestry: A Northern Legacy" In Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. (Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2002), 28.
  35. Hickman, Tapestry: A Northern Legacy, 30.
  36. "Speaking for Themselves: Eight Inuit Artists Compare Notes During a Seminar Organized by the Inuit Art Foundation.", edited by Marybelle Mitchell. Inuit Art Quarterly 5, no. 2 (1990): 16.
  37. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 66.
  38. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 64.
  39. Hickman, Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave, 68.
  40. Hickman, Deborah (2003). "Art Making in Pangnirtung: A Collective Vision". Canadian Parliamentary Review. 26 (1): 12.
  41. Cathleen, Knotsch, "Views of the Past." In Nuvisavik: The Place Where We Weave. Montreal, (Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2002), 24.
  42. "Malaya Akulukjuk and Agah Etooangat Sale Results." Heffel Fine Art Auction House. http://www.heffel.com/links/Sales_E.aspx?ID=585A5658 (accessed March 26, 2018)
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