Introduction
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The Marion Scott Gallery and Kardosh Projects are pleased to announce an exhibition of works celebrating the life and legacy of Kananginak Pootoogook (1935-2010). On view from December 10 to January 28, the exhibition will comprise 27 drawings made by Pootoogook across the last five years, including some of his last works produced in the months before his death in November 2010. An opening reception and public tribute will be held in the gallery on Saturday, December 10, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm.
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In an artistic career that lasted more than five decades, Pootoogook
produced a body of work of lasting cultural and aesthetic significance.
Born in 1935 in a small hunting camp on southern Baffin Island
near Cape Dorset, he was raised to be a hunter and trapper like
his father. But in 1957, he began collaborating with James Houston,
an artist from southern Canada hired by the federal government
to establish the North’s first printmaking studio. Working first
as a printmaker responsible for translating drawings by the community’s
older artists into limited edition stonecut prints, Pootoogook
soon developed his own drawing style. Alongside the print shop’s
national and international success, Pootoogook’s own artistic career
blossomed. He became known especially for his careful studies of
birds and other northern wildlife. Later, he began making a visual
record of Inuit culture in transition, documenting many of the
changes he had witnessed throughout his lifetime. Pootoogook continued
to draw until the spring of 2010, when illness forced him to seek
treatment in an Ottawa hospital.
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The exhibition will feature a number
of Pootoogook’s distinctive wildlife portraits, including several
of caribou, a subject for which he was especially known. In these
iconic images, Pootoogook represents the animal’s seasonal habits,
using unconventional perspectives to show these majestic creatures
from a variety of startling angles. Other drawings portray birds
that frequent the arctic, including families of snowy owls and colonies
of murres (sea birds that resemble penguins). In a few works, Pootoogook
has used bird forms as a starting point for more purely abstract
compositions.
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The exhibition is notable also for several images
that document social and cultural change in the North. In a fascinating
series of drawings from 2006, the artist has appropriated modern
ethnographic representations to create his own catalogue of traditional
and modern tools, as these index various phases and transformations
of Inuit culture. Other images portray the use of modern technology
such as skidoos and augers or ice drills.
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In a suite of autobiographical
drawings from 2010, among the last works the artist produced, Pootoogook
depicts himself, either alone or in the company of Shooyoo, his
wife. In one especially brilliant image, he presents himself circa
1965 as a young man wearing a suit and sunglasses—a look back at
his early days as a global ambassador for the new expressions coming
out of the North.
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Partial proceeds from the exhibition
will be donated to a social services organization in Cape Dorset. |
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KANANGINAK POOTOOGOOK
Gallery Information
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MARION
SCOTT GALLERY
2423 GRANVILLE STREET
VANCOUVER, BC CANADA V6H 3G5
TEL: 604.685.1934
FAX: 604.685.1890
ART@MARIONSCOTTGALLERY.COM
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