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Contemporary Inuit art usually is dated to 1948, when Toronto artist James Houston visited the eastern Arctic and returned to Montreal with a few samples of small carvings in stone and ivory.
In the Inuit language, tusarnitut means “sounds that please the ear.” It’s a fitting title for a new exhibition at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts focused on the power of songs and music in ...
When Qaumajuq at the Winnipeg Art Gallery unveiled INUA, its inaugural show for Inuit artists in early 2021, a full-size, red shipping container, doors open, was placed in the centre of the room ...
Art Inuit Culture Comes to Life in Shuvinai Ashoona’s Drawings In a new show in New York City, Ashoona’s memory-based compositions infuse truth coupled with whimsy surrounding life in the Arctic.
Canada Goose may be a luxury parka brand, but it has big ambitions when it comes to acquiring Canadian art. Walruses appear frequently in the folklore of the Inuit people, who have inhabited ...
Ferguson initially returned from Greenland with samples and field recordings which the duo sent to the indigenous artists ...
Tusarnitut! Music Born of the Cold assembles an array of Inuit art, artifacts and recordings from the 1950s to the present.
Art from around the world was displayed at the 14th Gwangju Biennale, which ended its 94-day run earlier this month. Of the nine national pavilions, the Canada Pavilion was a little different. It ...
Greenlandic women are transforming the Arctic's art scene and releasing their Indigenous identity from its colonial past. They're pushing for visibility and representation through their craft.
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