Dancing Walrus by Pitseolak Qimirpik

$650.00

Artist:                 Pitseolak Qimirpik

Community:       Cape Dorset

Media:                 Serpentine

Year:                    2013

Description

This Dancing Walrus  by Pitseolak Qimirpik is a good example of his ancestral roots and formal influences. His father is renowned Kelly Qimirpik and Pitseolak’s work, even in his more contemporary pieces, pays homage to the older generation. Pitseolak’s works shows the promise of a  future master carver.

 

Additional information

Weight 2.9 kg
Dimensions 6.5 × 6 × 7 in

Biography of Pitseolak Qimirpik

PITSEOLAK QIMIRPIK

1986 –

Pitseolak Qimirpik is a young Cape Dorset carver who’s quickly established himself as both apprentice (his father is renowned Dorset carver Kelly Qimirpik) and contemporary artist. Indeed, Qimirpik has successfully distinguished himself through this very juxtaposition, marrying pop-culture signifiers with traditional carving. He sits at the helm of a surging generation of Inuit artists who are reconfiguring their position onto history, traditional media, and narrative figuration. It’s a group who’s establishing itself through an aesthetic more easily situated in the contemporary artworld, while never fully divorced from its ancestral associations and formal base. Qimirpik, like so many of his contemporaries, continues to make the link between the two.

From the age of thirteen, Qimirpik has established himself through an exceptional craftsmanship and an attention to contemporary signifiers. Producing figures like muskoxen, drum dancers, and dancing walruses, his works are often colored by their subjects’ props or profiles. They don iPods or MP3 Players (as in Young Man with MP3, 2010), the white of their devices’ matte cording cutting a stark contrast to veined marble. (The ironic value lies in this plastic veneer being made of bone). Rabbits dance to hip-hop. Walruses kick up their flippers with glee. Qimirpik is falling in step with his generation’s multivalence, its double-speak, and winking referentiality. He seeks form in Inuit history, but roots his subjects in the new. – TD BANK

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