Owl by Elisapee Ishulutaq

$1,200.00

Artist:                    Elisapee Ishulutaq

Community:         Pangnirtung

Year:                       1981

Media:                    Print,

etching and aquatint,

Plate 17.75 x 17 ”

34/75

In stock

Description

Gorgeous print of Owl by Elisapee Ishulutaq from Pangnirtung

Interestingly, this image predates by several years the Cape Dorset intaglio printing workshops of the mid 1990s. (Walker’s)

Price is for framed print. Unframed: $900

Elisapee Ishulutaq, OC (1925–2018) was a celebrated printmaker and graphic artist born at the seasonal camp Kagiqtuqjuaq in the Northwest Territories and later moved to Panniqtuuq (Pangnirtung), NU, where she lived and worked. After moving to Panniqtuuq, Ishulutaq began her artistic practice and quickly started selling her work. She was included in the first Pangnirtung Print Collection in 1973 as well as each subsequent year a print collection was released. While Ishulutaq mostly worked in print and drawings, she also carved and transformed many of her prints into tapestries.

Ishulutaq’s work was driven by a narrative thread that paired traditional ways of life, before settlements, alongside contemporary social and environmental issues affecting Inuit across the North.

Ishulutaq exhibited her work nationally and internationally in institutions such as the Winnipeg Art Gallery in Winnipeg, MB, the Inuit Galerie in Mannheim, Germany, and Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna in Rome, Italy, among many others. Her work is included in many notable collections including the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, ON, Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts in Quebec. In 2014 she was awarded the Order of Canada for her contributions to the cultural and economic health of her community. Ishulutaq and her work have appeared in multiple publications including many profiles in the Inuit Art Quarterly. Notably, she was featured on the cover of IAQ’s Spring/Summer 2010 issue as well as the cover of Spring 2016.

From Inuit Art Quarterly: Edited: December 11, 2018

 

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