WebJun 10, 2024 · Exhibition publication produced by McMichael and Goose Lane Editions, titled Itee Pootoogook: Hymns to the Silence, is available for purchase at Visitor Services, [email protected]. Bilingual in Inuktitut and English, with essay contributions by Dr. Nancy Campbell, Pauloosie Kowmageak, Gerald McMaster, Tarralik Duffy, and Sky Glabush. WebSep 25, 2024 · Tarralik Duffy’s exhibition at Ottawa’s SAW features the artist’s interpretations of pop imagery associated... Read Text News Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory in Naak Silavit Qeqqa? at the Art Gallery of Ontario The performance work of 2024 Sobey Art Award-winner Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory is featured in... Read Text News
4 Inuit artists shortlisted for Kenojuak Ashevak Memorial Award
WebTarralik Duffy ships her “found bones” north and south to retail outlets that range from the Winnipeg Art Gallery to the Kuugaq Café in Cambridge Bay. She’s shipped pieces internationally, too, but sticks to Canada with beluga due to international restrictions on trade in marine mammals parts. Not that such restrictions worry her. Or Clarke. WebJun 3, 2024 · Nunavut’s Shuvinai Ashoona is the subject of a feature story in the New York Times. In the article, writer Patricia Leigh Brown discusses Ashoona’s studio practice in Kinngait (Cape Dorset) and connects it to the acclaimed artist’s growing world-wide reputation, evidenced most recently by her special mention at the 2024 Venice Biennale … hans arnold stahlschmidt
Tarralik Duffy: Gasoline Rainbows » WAG
WebApr 1, 2024 · Tarralik Duffy is a multidisciplinary artist and writer who lives and works between Salliq (Coral Harbour), Nunavut, and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. From jewellery and apparel to graphic works, Duffy’s creative output shares distinctly Inuit experiences, which are often infused with humour and pop culture. View recent articles by Tarralik Duffy Tarralik Duffy is a talented artist, jeweller and writer from Salliq (Coral Harbour), NU currently based in Saskatoon, SK. Working primarily in jewellery design under her label Ugly Fish, she uses materials salvaged from her home territory of Nunavut including beluga vertebrae, baleen, antler and seal skin. WebIn a new series of graphic drawings, prints and soft sculptures, Tarralik Duffy brings a reverence for Inuit icons and offers a tongue-in-cheek ode to familiar objects that have been adopted into contemporary Inuit culture. Her exhibition Pop Chip Kukuk transforms SAW into a pop-up shop featuring limited-edition art T-shirts, bags and prints ... chaddukesshow.com