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INUIT
ART, MADE BY THE BOOK?
BY
HEATHER IGLOLIORTE
In 1951, the Canadian Guild of
Crafts, funded by the Department of Resources and Development
and in co-operation with the Hudson’s Bay Company,
published an instructional booklet entitled Sunuyuksuk:
Eskimo Handicrafts. Written and illustrated by the guild’s
arctic representative, James Houston, the booklet offered
suggestions to Inuit on what to make and what materials
to use in their handicrafts and carvings to make them
appealing to a southern market.
The Department of Resources and
Development had an agreement with the Canadian Handicraft
Guild to fund the Guild’s handicraft activities
in the North. With the decline of the fur trade the
Inuit, who had been recently settled into communities,
were becoming largely dependent on the Canadian government
for social assistance. Eager for the Inuit to regain
self-sufficiency, the government supported the Guild’s
arctic initiatives. In exchange for the carvings and
crafts Houston purchased, the Inuit would receive store
credit redeemable for goods such as rifles, tobacco
and flour at Hudson’s Bay Company stores.
The Guild’s instructional
booklet was published in the early days of this fledgling
industry. Intended to be the first of a series of illustrated
guidebooks, Sunuyuksuk – which means things that
can be made in Inuktitut – was created to stimulate
the handicraft business. The 30-page booklet was illustrated
with images of Inuit tools, toys, and carvings that
Houston had seen or purchased on his initial visits
North. In addition, it included drawings of non-Inuit
items, such as cribbage boards, rifle cases, and ashtrays
decorated in Inuit motifs and made from materials indigenous
to the Arctic. Houston suggested these market-driven
objects would be found “useful and acceptable
to the white man.” As it turned out, those acculturated
objects did not sell well to collectors of Inuit art,
who desired “authentic” work uninfluenced
by the outside world.
Sunuyusuk: Eskimo Handicrafts
was a success on some levels. RCMP officers, teachers,
missionaries and Hudson’s Bay Company traders
circulated Sunuyuksuk: Eskimo Handicrafts throughout
the North, encouraging Inuit to try their hand at making
the articles described in Houston’s text. This
enthusiastic promotion was spurred on by the preliminary
success of handicrafts initiatives: the distribution
of relief funds had decreased in the communities that
participated in the handicrafts industry, and RCMP officers
reported an overall increase in the self-esteem of those
Inuit who were given the opportunity to support themselves
and their families. These were the positive effects
of the industry that Houston was instrumental in establishing
for the Inuit of the eastern Arctic.
However, in spite of these initial
good tidings, the pamphlet drew considerable criticism
from the then Department of Resources and Development.
One objection came from a government official who was
offended by the illustration of a carving of an Inuk
about to shoot a musk ox, a species that was protected
under the Game Ordinance. Others objected to the didactic
tone of the text. While Houston stated in the introduction
that the suggestions were not meant to limit the Inuit,
the explicitly instructional nature of the drawings
and text contradicted this assertion, offending some
with its didactic tone. Helga Goetz writes in The Development
of Inuit Art (1986) that the booklet became an “embarrassment”
to the department.
The difficulty was this, Goetz
explains: “How does one generate production of
crafts in one culture for sale to another, foreign culture
without giving instruction in some form or other?”
Although well intended, the pamphlet’s heavy-handed
approach ultimately backfired; Inuit craftspeople and
carvers produced an abundance of work based on the booklet’s
suggestions, resulting in numerous examples of very
similar articles. In the end, the pamphlet was not “the
first of a series,” as promised; it was withdrawn
from circulation shortly after its publication and recalled
in 1958.
Ironically,
the failure of Sunuyuksuk: Eskimo Handicrafts now appears
to have had a constructive and beneficial impact on
the development of contemporary Inuit art. Due to the
poor reception of these non-Inuit objects, Houston changed
direction and instead encouraged the Inuit to develop
individual styles and to carefully finish works. His
influence is embedded in the subjects and styles of
what we see as contemporary Inuit art today. While not
all of the objects in this exhibition continue to be
produced, even the most unusual pieces have recognizable
features that respond to our idea of Inuit art, past
and present.
Heather
Igloliorte is an Inuk writer and artist currently completing
a Master’s degree in Canadian Art History at Carleton
University in Ottawa. Her research interests deal with
contemporary issues in Inuit art, and her thesis is
specifically concerned with addressing the under representation
of Labrador Inuit art within Canada’s public arts
institutions. Her artwork, which is primarily two-dimensional,
has been exhibited in group and solo exhibitions in
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, and her paintings and
prints are in numerous private collections in Newfoundland
and Labrador. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Art, Major
in Fine Art, Minor in Art History from the Nova Scotia
College of Art and Design, and is currently employed
as Research Assistant at the Carleton University Art
Gallery, where she was the Curator of Inuit Art in the
summer of 2005. She is proud to be an Inuk of mixed
ancestry.
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