Showing posts with label north. Show all posts
Showing posts with label north. Show all posts

17 October 2015

Danse, plonge, sent, marche

Ô Ours

Dancing bear

Allan Sheutiapik
 Jamesie Kelly
Johnny Papigatook
Mosesee Pootoogook
Napachie Ashoona

Diving bear

Alariaq Shaa
Isaaci Petaulassie
Joanie Ragee
Killiktee Killiktee
Tim Pee

Scenting bear

Ashevak Adla   
Kakee Ningeosiak
Michael Samayualie 
Tim Pee
Tony Oqutaq

Walking bear

Ashevak Tunnillie
Killiktee Killiktee
Kooyoo Peter
Ottokie Samayualie
Tim Ezekiel


Source: Fine Inuit carvings



14 October 2015

En particulier les avions

A Good Catch (1980)

Artiste inuit, Pudlo Pudlat (1916-1992) a commencé à dessiner avec des crayons de couleur et des stylos-feutre au milieu des années 60. Puis son art est devenu plus complexe. À bien des égards son travail symbolise les paradoxes de la rencontre entre la culture traditionnelle inuit et la vie moderne. Pudlo Pudlat était fasciné par les icônes de la modernité, en particulier les avions.

“Je dessine ce à quoi je pense, mais je pense que parfois le crayon a lui aussi un cerveau.”


 A Ship Passes By (1983)

 Aeroplane (1976)

 Airplanes over Ice Cap (1980)

 Bird with Boat

 [Don't know]

 Imposed Migration (1986)

 Interrupted Solitude (1985)

 Landscape with Settlement (1981-82)

 Spring Camp at Igakjuak (1975)

 Timiat Timijut (1976)

Winter Games (1976)

Women at the Fish Lake (1977)



Serge Gainsbourg •ั Cargo Culte



10 October 2015

From antler bird

Image première:
vintage ANTLER BIRD carving - inuit sculpture - native - aboriginal. No.002099 {source}

Then into Visually similar images:


 Wendy Ann Titmus

 Abstract modernist 

Hydra 1 (ironwood sculpture by Cody Powell & Ben Carpenter)

 George Hitkolok (2005)

 Beethoven's Trumpet (With Ear) Opus # 133 (2007) by John Baldessari

 Kay Bojesen

 Almond and olive wood

  Around 1390 to 1352 B.C.

 Georgia Gerber: Paired Pheasants

 Kayaker (19th century)

 Inuit carved fossil ivory sculpture of king salmon, signed Brian Kulik



Etc, etc, etc,




18 July 2015

The idea of forest

(1901)

Arthur Heming (1870–1940) was a Canadian traveller, hunter, illustrator, author and painter. He was known as the chronicler of the North for his paintings, sketches, essays and books about Canada's North.

In a 1940 article on Heming in The Beaver, W.J. Phillips, a respected Canadian artist, quoted a profile on Heming from the art magazine The Connoisseur.

"Through his activities as traveller, hunter, illustrator, author and painter, he has acquired an international reputation. He possesses an astonishing vigorous style, the more unique because it owes nothing to any classified school or tradition, He revels in the dramatic incidents of field and forest, interpreting them in boldly emphasized patterns and in sweeping and strongly marked rhythms-the sense of which doubtless came to him through his observations of the movement of wild things against the northern background of snow and crystal-clear air." 

Source: Canoe.ca
 
Evening Pipes

“About once every hour the voyageurs in the great freight canoes were allowed time out from paddling to pack and light their short clay pipes. For the French canoemen, the breaks became known as pipes and they were so regular that distances were recalled as trois pipes or sept pipes. The tranquil scene is a retrospective painting by Arthur Heming, who traveled with the last of the fur brigades.”


 (1897)

  (1919)

  (1925)

  (1938)