We were joined by artist Tarralik Duffy and curator Taqralik Partridge in conversation as they discuss the Art Gallery of Guelph’s exhibition ᐃᓅᓯᕋ | Inuusira, focusing on the influence of the work of Pitseolak Ashoona and her 1971 illustrated autobiography titled Pictures out of my life. Pitseolak created more than 8,000 drawings over her 20 year career, meticulously documenting details of everyday life in the North that would have a profound impact for both Duffy and Partridge. Inspired by the publication, Inuusira, which means “my life,” features new work by Tarralik Duffy in dialogue with Pitseolak’s prints and drawings from the gallery’s collection, capturing an evolving Inuk-inflected popular culture. Tarralik Duffy is a multidisciplinary artist and writer who lives and works between Salliq (Coral Harbour), Nunavut, and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Spanning jewelry and apparel to graphic works, Tarralik’s creative practice highlights distinctly Inuit experiences. She has been a 2021 artist-in-residence with the Art Gallery of Guelph. In 2018, Taqralik Partridge co-curated Tunirrusiangit, meaning “‘the gifts they gave us’” at the AGO. She was selected to be part of the Sydney Biennale (Australia) in 2020 and curated Qautamaat | Every day / everyday, at the Art Gallery of Guelph, in 2020. Taqralik Partridge is currently adjunct curator at the Art Gallery of Guelph and the director of SAW Centre’s Nordic Lab, promoting collaboration and exchange between Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists.We were joined by artist Tarralik Duffy and curator Taqralik Partridge in conversation as they discuss the Art Gallery of Guelph’s exhibition ᐃᓅᓯᕋ | Inuusira, focusing on the influence of the work of Pitseolak Ashoona and her 1971 illustrated autobiography titled Pictures out of my life. Pitseolak created more than 8,000 drawings over her 20 year care …
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Introduction
Introduction
0:00
Introduction
0:00
Views of the exhibition
Views of the exhibition
6:00
Views of the exhibition
6:00
The word talk
The word talk
14:30
The word talk
14:30
Comparing to Inuit artists
Comparing to Inuit artists
18:40
Comparing to Inuit artists
18:40
The Movement
The Movement
21:25
The Movement
21:25
Documenting
Documenting
23:16
Documenting
23:16
Personal Prints
Personal Prints
26:17
Personal Prints
26:17
The Scarf
The Scarf
29:06
The Scarf
29:06
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Introduction
0:03
uh welcome everyone it’s great to see you here tonight uh thanks for joining us for this conversation um
0:09
and welcome to the students who are with us as well from history and art history
0:14
my name is shauna mccabe and i’m the director of the art gallery of guelph and i’d like to welcome you all as well as our guest tonight uh attacker nick
0:22
partridge as well as tyrolik duffy um to begin i’d like to offer land
0:28
acknowledgement on behalf of the art gallery of guelph which is hosting this event tonight
0:33
guelph is situated on treaty land that is steeped in rich indigenous history and home to many first nations inuit and
0:41
metis people today we acknowledge that the art gallery of wolf resides on the traditional
0:46
territory of the mississaugas of the credit first nation of the anishinaabeg peoples who are the
0:52
ancestral holders and today the treaty holders of this land we recognize the significance of the
0:59
dish with one spoon covenant to this land and offer our respect to our anishinaabe nishoni and metis neighbors
1:05
as we strive to strengthen our relationships with them we express our gratitude and recognize a
1:11
responsibility for the stewardship of the land on which we live work and create
1:16
and as we’re all gathered virtually today connected and yet physically dispersed it’s also a good moment to
1:22
recognize how the different traditional lands we reside in and move through and form our lives
1:28
and we acknowledge the elders past present and future of these lands with gratitude and respect
1:33
so a few details everyone is muted for this conversation
1:39
and we invite you to use the chat area for questions uh for the for the um artist and curator and we will return to
1:46
the questions after the conversation and we’ll probably um can actually make everyone visible at that point too to
1:51
have more of a dialogue the project that we’re speaking about tonight even though it’s um on view at
1:58
the art gallery of guelph now um actually started probably you know over 40 years ago the art gallery of
2:04
guelph was founded in 1978 and began collecting the work of inuit artists soon after that and today um
2:12
inuit artwork represents about a quarter of our collection um that totally in total has about 10
2:18
000 works and so in the last few years we’ve we’ve really sort of been focusing on the sort
2:24
of sense of responsibility um that we feel to engage in and um you know
2:30
interact and display and share this these collections of work from the north that we hold in public trust
2:36
um but it by involving communities for whom the artworks hold the most relevance and as a result we invite invited dom
2:43
technic um to work with us as an adjunct curator and uh she is in the process of curating
2:49
a large exhibition drawing on the gallery’s collection as well as contemporary artists that will be on
2:54
view this summer um paclik is uh currently director of the nordic lab which is a project of saw
3:02
gallery in ottawa writer and curator she is originally from nunavik and has been
3:07
living previously in norway as well as the united states this project
3:14
this exhibition we’re talking about tonight as well as the other exhibition in the summer builds on previous
3:19
curatorial projects including uh the first inuit curated project that was presented at the art gallery of ontario
3:27
and her role as previous editor at large for inuit quarterly
3:32
the exhibition that we’re focusing on tonight is uh currently at the art gallery guelph um which i mentioned and
3:38
we will reopen to the public on tuesday which means my life
3:45
creates a dialogue between two artists and one of them who is with us tonight
3:50
tara like duffy um is a multi-disciplinary artist and writer who lives and works between coral
3:57
harbor and nunavut and saskatoon saskatchewan and her work uh
4:04
i’m just gonna actually share my screen just briefly here
4:12
so this is uh just a little introduction to carlek’s work um her she’s she’s uh been working in
4:20
everything from jewelry and apparel to graphic works and her creative practice highlights uh
4:26
very distinct inuit experiences referencing inherited traditions that
4:31
include syllabics it’s a language and materials salvage from our home territory of nunavut
4:38
such as vertebrae lean antler and seal skin as well as elements
4:43
of contemporary culture and so works like this for example
4:49
or this and we have more images of her work as well coming up
4:55
uh so she’s been uh with the art gallery of guelph as artists in residence um and
5:00
to produce the and and help develop the work for the exhibition uh in ucla
5:07
um some glimpses of the exhibition here um and we have uh images of the work um
5:14
close up um that follow this um so this actually um you know this
5:21
exhibition actually emerged as part of the collaboration when tachrylic began working with us we
5:27
were actually working on the larger project and this exhibition sort of developed as
5:32
part of that dialogue it also comes out of a personal relationship between tarlek and takalek
5:38
that we’ll talk about shortly so here’s just some views of the
5:44
exhibition just to have some perspective of what it looks like in the space and
5:50
the various elements
Views of the exhibition
6:02
and it’s also uh in particular a response to a single book called pictures out of my life which is an
6:08
illustrated autobiography of the artist pizziella kashuna so just briefly we’ll talk more about
6:15
fizzy luck of course but she was born in 1904 on nottingham island in the hudson
6:21
streets and spent her childhood in several camps on the south baffin coast
6:27
and ultimately she would settle permanently in cape dorset um in the early 60s she was among the first
6:34
in cape dorset to begin drawing and the most prolific so um this is just a glimpse at the book
6:41
um and what it looks like the book itself was published in 1971 and it’s an illustrated autobiography
6:48
and by autobiography obviously she didn’t write it herself but um a woman named dorothy ebers actually did
6:54
interviews um with um pizza luck and that is translated in both english and syllabics
7:02
this is actually the second book to be published in english and syllabics and the first was the bible
7:13
so i know perhaps we can start maybe um i know this is so key to how the
7:18
exhibition developed um but um i know this book played a role for both of you um
7:26
growing up and that was part of what inspired this so um tachylic do you
7:31
want to start talking about the idea for this exhibition and how it evolved
7:38
yes thank you so much shawna such a wonderful introduction uh so my name is takadik partridge as
7:45
shanna said i’m currently in ottawa on unseated anishinaabe algonquin territory
7:53
and such a pleasure to be on here tonight with with you too and with uh everybody
7:59
who’s here to join in on the conversation um
8:06
so i guess i’ll start with where i started working with you shauna was um
8:12
i’ve been doing work with musa gettys which is a fun an art foundation in guelph as well i see that sean’s on the
8:18
call hi sean and as part of that a resident that
8:23
residency i was invited to do by elwood elwood jimmy who was
8:29
the person that i’m working with invited to do something
8:35
around the festival arts everywhere all of the artists in that residence
8:41
were invited to to do some kind of intervention and my intervention was to be um
8:47
an exhibition and shauna you so kindly offered the space at hg
8:53
and we did which was uh at that point the idea about everyday
8:59
photos of everyday life uh taken by enui uh both professional photographers and
9:05
non-professional photographers um and then after that we kept talking and
9:11
you went and got a grant and we’re continuing on the idea of the math
9:17
every day every day um so this exhibition is in that vein as
9:22
well it’s pictures out of its life and then also pictures are out of the duffy’s
9:28
life um when you and i had first talked i had told you that both the two of us were
9:36
very uh moved by this book when we were kids
9:41
and um it’s just like for me it’s just a dream that we were able to pull something
9:47
together with and i was able to go and touch the with gloves
9:52
touch the images that dictula had done with her own hands you know i just
9:59
um i’m so so happy with how it turned out too
10:05
and uh it’s just unfortunate that people can’t go in person but it’s wonderful that you’re
10:10
doing this recording and we reopen next week so very good
10:18
also extended the exhibition so it’ll be up uh through march so
10:25
so how did um so you both grew up with the book uh maybe talk about had you actually spoken about well tarlek your
10:33
work comes out of the same ideas very much about everyday materials
10:38
um had you actually talked about concilius work before and creating work in relationship to it
10:45
um i don’t know if we spoke about specifically creating before this project but i know we’ve spoken about
10:51
the book before um because i do have a habit of going book shopping and book thrifting or buying stuff off
10:58
and i remember finding it again and i had forgotten about it um my mommies have a coffee in the hotel
11:04
they have a hotel uh in coral in nineveh and so it’s for the guests to look at and i remember i would just flip through
11:10
it uh during lunch hours because that’s where we’d spend a lot of our lunches
11:16
so yeah it’s always been touched by it and again i often have conversations about
11:21
absolutely everything and so um
11:28
i was just incredibly honored to have this because when i first started drawing it’s like not that i didn’t take it seriously but you just sort of think
11:34
of it as not not art but just an idea on a paper that i’m trying to get out of my hand
11:39
like draw and click um but obviously very influenced by the inuit artists
11:44
that i have been so fortunate to be influenced by
11:51
just surrounded by i should say since i was a young child and not even really realizing it because a lot of
11:56
times too like i would dismiss some inuit artists just creepy and weird
12:02
um but that’s something that i’ve come to really appreciate um as and as well as just like the
12:08
everyday items that inuit have always drawn how it’s changing and how the items that surround us are changing
12:15
and how some people might not like outside of nunavut or outside of being an inuk everyday life wouldn’t
12:22
necessarily know that this is something that surrounds us every day
12:29
[Music] but what do you think like how i think you know
12:37
i think a long time we hadn’t talked about you doing work in response to lock’s work but
12:43
um we had talked about the book and both loving the book as children i remember
12:50
it was one of um ever since i was very young it was one of the
12:55
books that i just would look at for a long time and of course i didn’t i mean i didn’t
13:01
read the words because they were maybe not as interesting for a little kid but
13:07
just those images are just sort of stuck in my mind you know the enormous mosquitoes like if you look on the cover
13:13
of the book they’re very simply drawn but they’re just it’s so effective as an image
13:22
and just the idea of how people would carry things when they’re traveling
13:28
look you can see that she has the sewn pail or bucket
13:34
probably it’s own out of seal skin all the implements that she’s carrying and she’s even carrying a baby and those
13:40
mosquitoes are attacking and i for me it feels so real like it’s like
13:46
it becomes real in my mind when i think about it that those mosquitoes are that big
13:53
they are they really aren’t that big but just oh i just i could i just imagined all
14:00
kinds of scenarios and then to see that also as a child and be and realize it that realize that it was
14:08
um our fellow enoch who had drawn those and that they were in a book
14:13
and that you know this person was famous for that like they were known in the world
14:20
i feel like it was so valuable to to understand that that this is that
14:26
important that it’s in a book and we actually have
The word talk
14:32
uh not that work but this work very similar very similar you can see
14:38
her ulu is hanging down there by a string too the mosquito’s even trying to bite her feet yeah
14:45
and we had used this as um beside this one um as sort of the intro the intro
14:51
wall just and it’s been kind of interesting you know when we did installation actually we are doing it
14:57
kind of remotely um you know by phone basically tucker like entirely
15:03
uh couldn’t travel at the time so um and then to deciding on what we were going to create you know pairings of and
15:10
relationships between so um this work and this work um just seemed to make a
15:15
lot of sense because of the relationship of you know um you know older and younger
15:20
um and just the different environments i think too like the change and that’s
15:26
what i think i love so much about this this exhibition is just the you know the traditional to contemporary
15:32
environments that get captured also the yellow
15:37
so when we’re trying to figure out the wall color and we sort of noticed that there’s this frequent yellow appearing
15:42
in both metallic and pencil it’s work i love the yellow yeah
15:49
hence the wall so yeah do you want to talk about this word talk
15:54
yeah um it sort of calls back to like uh when i was living back home i lived away
15:59
from home for a long time uh and when i had left i that was i just wanted out i didn’t want to be in
16:05
nunavut anymore i was young 17 18 and i never went back for like i mean i
16:10
visited every year but i didn’t go back back for about 17 years and i had this deep longing
16:17
for home that was uh it’s still in me like i can’t it’s
16:23
like i had spent all that time trying to get away and now i’m trying to spend all my time to go back and uh
16:30
i remember just taking pictures all the time before smartphones i just take pictures of everything
16:36
like pepsi drying in a porch or my mom’s fish heads uh fermenting in
16:42
in a in a like a a pot just anywhere or just kids walking to the co-op like
16:48
everything became beautiful to me everything became something that was precious
16:54
whereas before when i was living there it’s like to me it was like the tv what the things
16:59
that were on the tv is what i felt was more important or more precious or that’s what i wanted i was missing out
17:06
on the world and so those those drawings to like when i would snap those pictures i didn’t always have the best quality
17:13
camera but these moments that i wanted to remember forever in a way that
17:18
maybe wouldn’t deteriorate uh and so those two girls especially i don’t know if that’s a sewer pump or a
17:25
water pump i’m not sure but they’re just having like their popsicles by the quick stop and
17:30
uh just how colorful the clothing is with the young people
17:36
and how it sort of uh is like a call in response to like how colorful it’s your last work is and
17:42
and yeah that’s just it was just this need this this need to document and to
17:49
remember and to to like blow kisses back to nunavut and
17:55
there is beauty and everything there and i think for a longest time you you hear nunavut described as you know not so
18:01
much now but like the barren lands or like why would you live there like why does anyone live there even when i was
18:06
traveling people would often say these things to me but there’s just so much beauty and
18:13
but when i was drawing that picture this is why i need taco in my life because i’m constantly writing myself off or
18:19
constantly thinking something’s not good because i it’s you know you do this comparison to the inuit artists that i
18:26
really admire and that’s like there’s just i just don’t think it’s as cool or as good or
18:31
as like is this some shitty children’s book illustration that i’ve drawn you know you just don’t know and so i really
18:37
appreciate having um uh just a colleague’s belief in me and
Comparing to Inuit artists
18:44
then seeing it installed uh actually made me cry but along with the yellow and to see it along with her work
18:50
in person really seeing it come to life i could see uh
18:56
sort of how they are related or as while i was doing the work it was a little bit more difficult
19:01
to feel confident that my work should be shown alongs or
19:07
could be shown alongside hers
19:13
well and the relationships run like great through it so the you know the child with the dog and the coat and the
19:19
jacket in the hood and then you know in relationship to the children being carried and
19:26
totally it’s like that like with her and all the baggage too like the young woman was smoking the cigarette with the northern bag
19:33
often see walking with the co-op bags or the northern bags
19:38
and the leggings you know things everywhere yeah and you design leggings right
19:45
i do yes it’s been a while since i’ve designed leggings some but yeah i love i love the idea of
19:51
putting art on everything and anything because there’s no real limits to uh
19:56
and this i guess you know and it’s nice to have living billboards of people not so much for advertisement but just
20:03
to see also representation just you could see it um
20:09
inuit syllabics or things that are our culture on our clothes wasn’t something you
20:15
really really saw growing up besides like homemade chocolates with skidoo on them
20:23
[Music] and these there are quite a few uh works by pizzilock in the exhibition um
20:29
do you want to talk about how you selected those yeah i mean i of course going with a
20:35
theme about scenes from everyday life um but also
20:40
a sense of movement a sense of uh i i like work that seems to have like
20:47
a sort of contained singularity i don’t know if that describes it well but like it’s just
20:53
sort of striking one striking thing um so like you can see these are quite
20:59
circular and even you know there’s a lot of stuff going on there there’s a circular kind
21:05
of form to that um a lot of uh diabetics work is like that as well
21:11
um and yeah the movement i just you know i mean
21:17
all of her work is it feels alive anyway but some of them are just so
21:23
um so striking and so vibrant
The Movement
21:29
because we left a lot out yes and it’s like it’s not i mean it’s not unfortunate but it’s it is unfortunate
21:35
that we sound like a giant room but yeah i mean like look at this it’s just so gorgeous
21:42
they’re beautiful i love the perspective like you know that the one on the right with the woman standing on on the rocky
21:49
shore and then you know looking out to uh the people on the kayaks and
21:54
the sea it’s like the perspective is that you know what’s in front of her is sort of flattened
22:00
down to our 2d kind of view and it just it feels enormous to me
22:07
you know you can say you feel the power of the ocean in there’s no it’s not contained by
22:15
like a linear frame [Music]
22:20
um dogs yeah fouled it too like going out boating or
22:26
being on the land and so there are so many similarities to like how i grew up going out camping
22:33
and so you could see like the flashes of uh what her life was what seeming so
22:39
long ago and how much we seem to have lost but how much is still really much alive and very much
22:46
there even while we were growing up like getting water too was one of the things if
22:51
you’re up camping and then that was one of the things something like you go get the water
22:56
or your chili oak to go get the water and you do it with a pot as opposed to like the the implements that chocolate
23:03
was talking about in the cover of the book but that’s something that i had done as a child you know
23:09
go get fresh water for tea or for cooking or washing whatever
Documenting
23:16
and you mentioned you know that um what you are doing is sort of documenting and remembering and i think
23:22
that’s what she was doing as well um documenting for you know so
23:27
we can all remember that sort of a traditional um life right in the north
23:34
yeah and it’s so easy to dismiss uh like even my own memories or even five
23:39
years ago but life has completely changed uh even from a couple of years you know with covet and everyone’s
23:46
isolating and we’re less free to move around and so when i was there i just i did
23:52
have the sense of urgency to you know capture as much as i could take photos or draw or
23:58
like collect bones um oh there’s just a sense of i don’t know how long this is going to last and and
24:05
maybe i did develop an appreciation for the culture as it is now
24:11
and obviously i just find everything about inuit just beautiful
24:16
and the children everywhere and just the freedom that is in like our communities that’s totally different than than a
24:22
city vibe you know and the landmarks
24:28
you know and i can stand like how prolific she is i i had a sense of that when i began
24:34
drawing for this exhibition it’s like the ideas keep coming and you want to do more and more
24:40
and more and more and then you realize you’ve had too many now or like i still have so many drawings that
24:46
i want to do or that aren’t finished yet along the same vein but i do really appreciate you
24:52
both for the invitation because i didn’t really see myself in this like this this these
24:57
kinds of drawings but it’s really something that i’ve fallen in love with
25:03
like i wasn’t sure i could could draw kids as opposed to like a pop can
25:10
i know and so one of the things that was interesting is that you do sort of work in these like almost you know three
25:16
different forms at the same time so digital drawing pencil crayon drawing just pencil
25:23
drawing actually four um and then prints prints from digital drawings and other drawings so do you
25:29
want to just talk about kind of the fluidity of how you you’re working yeah i think uh the pencil just how i
25:36
sort of get the idea down and i feel good and then i want to bring it to life more with color
25:42
but then i do get afraid of ruining the piece or not being able to come back from it if i’ve decided to color
25:49
something and i change my mind like i can become a little bit uh of an anxious type as opposed i wish i could just be
25:54
freer but i think that’s where i i find comfort in digital where i can just go
26:00
and play and then if i do want to pull back i can but i’m glad that
26:05
would really encourage me like she said no i want like your drawings your hands at paper whereas that felt a little naked to me
26:13
when i was used to sort of going into the digital realm or into the
Personal Prints
26:20
print realm but i really do find the beauty and the power and like the hand to page or the
26:25
hand to paper um but i would like to get into like silk screen printing now too for instead
26:31
of like the digital prints maybe going out and and silk screening it down uh to kind of get the effect that i get
26:39
from digital printing but yeah are really personal
26:45
you want to talk a little bit about those which ones let me see oh yes yes yes oh
26:53
my mom happiest times in our home which can be kind of a grumpy house sometimes it’s
26:59
when my mom has the accord you know it’s just happy fun time she’s in great good mood she’ll
27:06
pull out her purple accordion and my son will dance and she just sits
27:12
in her chair that that’s her chair or you know she’s always on the phone either with her friends or
27:17
counseling people because she works as a pastor but yeah i just love just she normally
27:23
won’t smile if i want to take her picture but if she’s her instrument she’ll smile
27:28
so to me that was a very very precious drawing to my mom and then the drawing
27:34
next to it is actually my anarchist accordion and she would play often too at
27:40
community hall or and i actually didn’t remember what her recording looked like but i was
27:45
visiting my uncle one day for lunch and i noticed that the panther and i love black panthers
27:52
are one of my favorite animals as well and i was wondering i thought it was just the most beautiful accordion and my aunts have told me it was my honor chels
27:59
so i quickly just had snapped a picture and i wanted to make a print out of it too for like a crew neck print
28:06
um and yeah these are just things to like somehow uh what’s the word um
28:13
not a time capsule i’m but you know is uh immortalized is not the right word but in in a way uh keep it from eroding
28:20
or my little my way of um remembering something forever and it’s
28:26
not even on purpose i guess you just sort of i wouldn’t have even thought of the two together which is ridiculous because it
28:32
seems yes but just the music with accordions
28:38
that’s in my family line yeah and i know so looking at you know
28:45
like the the coke cans and the um the you you sort of in the past have done
28:52
dealt with sort of these single objects as well and then so like going from like objects to these scenes right because
28:59
these like these you know um individuals like like her playing and we have more
29:05
of those um this is uh yeah it gives you a bit more of the background i suppose or the
The Scarf
29:10
context of the piece i was actually you had posted the photograph that the one on the right is
29:16
based on and i went to your facebook to see if i could find it but i couldn’t find it
29:22
but the scarf yes yeah
29:27
yeah she’s so she’s so i love uh she’s actually just recently passed away but one of my most favorite cherished elders
29:33
and um i would always take pictures always i still do to this day and uh i remember where her cabin and i asked if she would
29:40
put on my click scarf you know and then i’d actually asked her she wanted that one or the pepsi when she wanted the pepsi one or the peepsy one
29:47
but i snapped the picture of her with the click and uh my mom was apologizing for me saying oh you know my daughter’s
29:53
was taking pictures and then the lady was just like um um so the cook was just like um
30:00
which i know her which was so warm because she was just like basically giving me permission to take as many
30:05
pictures as i wanted and and be welcome because sometimes like i’ve suffered a lot of scorn taking
30:11
pictures before social media made things a little bit more acceptable
30:17
but i would sneak photos of uh like meat on cardboard or are eating because it was
30:24
something that we weren’t we were told not to do and he wouldn’t do because there was still a level of shame
30:30
involved like would tell me to warn her if i was ever going to come over with a kaduna or
30:36
non-inuk person so that’s how i grew up and so i’ve seen the change from
30:43
you know a little bit of shame to like complete celebration which is wonderful but yeah i’ve
30:48
definitely lived in a time where sometimes still you know if you’re taking photos people can get a little
30:54
uncomfortable but i’ll do it but yeah that’s at her cabin my favorite
31:02
place to be where there’s no english spoken and [Music] you just sit and drink tea and eat pile
31:09
of biscuits or palawa and simon sigzia
31:15
one of the best things that could ever happen as a child where it feels like nothing ever happens in your whole community is like a concert
31:24
yeah a bunch of people fly in it’s like the most exciting [Music] like better than any concert i think
31:30
they’ve gone to even as an adult when was this actually
31:36
uh rankin inlet i think that would have been that was from a picture i can’t remember specifically what
31:42
concert but there was one time i was visiting family in rankin and i know there’s like a cbc
31:47
thing but and my mom would let me stay out a little bit later at the hall as long as the music and everything was
31:53
going on i was allowed to be out which was very rare and everyone’s stomping and kids are
31:59
running around i don’t know one of the some of the best memories and he’s totally like
32:05
a real rock star a famous you know very famous to this day if he if i place
32:13
music on youtube i actually start stomping
32:19
carried away and these are a couple of the the prints
32:24
from digital drawings yes yes yes you can see sort of the different consistency of the drawing
32:30
because of that um it’s interesting looking at like her drawing of water here and your
32:37
you know how you how you create the wall color on the background here very similar
32:45
i do yeah i love the detail of pattern
32:50
yeah i like the contrasting things that like i said the things that i probably wouldn’t have found beautiful or even noticed growing up at this as year old
32:56
you just sort of just the plywood and along with like the rusted stove or
33:03
you know a simon he’s easy to make look cool because he was just cool a cool guy with rubber boots with like
33:08
the company not coming back what is that i can’t remember that inside part the duffel sock part of the coming uh we say
33:19
in rankin right i was i’m a little bit second guessing myself but i just think that’s
33:24
another thing that i would love to just draw singularly as a rubber boot with the
33:30
the duffel sock [Music] see
The Pattern
33:35
so here’s some of pixie luck just the pattern on hers as well
33:41
drawings etchings on paper yeah i really like i love that
33:47
you know the black and white it shows it makes you look at the details more closely i think
33:54
um we we were in the collection last week um tachylic and gail cabluna and i and
34:01
we were you know a number of artists uh sort of take this approach to drawing the the dress in the um
34:08
with the lines the vertical and horizontal lines this appears quite frequently in color and in black and
34:13
white um with other artists as well
34:18
and yeah i think the like the black and white contrast or the contrast between darker and lighter
34:24
shades of things it’s very you know like that’s something that i do in my own work and
34:31
i’ve seen and especially in clothing gail and i were actually talking about
34:36
um her tapestry that she’s working on that uh
34:42
sort of in relation to her grandmother’s tapestries and how the work on the edging of her grandmother’s tapestries
34:48
is that contrast i think it really goes to uh
34:54
clothing used to always be made out of animal skins which are just various shades of browns and blacks and whites
35:01
so what people had to work with was the contrast in in darkness and lightness
35:09
and it’s just really striking and sorry go ahead no it’d be well you and i have talked
35:17
about this before like remember that black and white jumper that we were looking at a picture
35:24
of i think it’s right now in the 1950s or something
35:30
it’s just a contrast to in the geometric shapes or at least when they’re working with just like the white classic along
35:35
with the gray and it’s like this beautiful soft gradient and as soon as we had our chance to work with colors
35:41
it’s like you see like the hudson bay lines kind of on jackets and i like the
35:46
simplicity of that kind of contrast and i think it’s sort of the same as like
35:51
the old advertisements like pilot biscuits being like white and green with a little splash of red here or like
35:58
even the china lily with the black and the yellow uh and i do love black and white that’s
36:04
why like i’m very much a black and white kind of person too like with the syllabus leggings i had first designed
36:10
like and i see that in a colleague’s heart beads that she beaded hearts that she had just completed that i wanted to
36:17
buy and they’ve already sold but you know red and then the black and the white this is something beautiful about
36:23
to make more i’m just mad about it
36:31
yeah but there’s something so beautiful and timeless about i think black and white and okay i need to make this
36:38
[Laughter] i like the boldness of when you choose
36:43
color too because sometimes i question my my color choices
36:50
the image on the right is the only image that we have from the book actually so
36:55
um you know that’s how prolific she is she we actually have so many of her works and none from the book except for
37:01
one so um amazing the only overlap
37:08
let’s see here some more i love these ones
37:17
i love the black and yeah just the drawing straight drawing which is what inspired me to do like the eye chart
37:22
pencil because i have to like to ink it but definitely inspired by uh
37:30
just something beautiful about just the lines i guess but
37:35
her work is just amazing i could look at it forever look how strong she must be there’s two
37:42
caribou heads in her backpack
37:47
and her queen make almost looks like a nano but it’s not
37:53
i love it it’s like a war too we played that like
37:59
so it’s you know it’s such a typical game for any
38:04
occasion christmas games or easter games or canada day or whatever
38:10
and like everybody can join in yeah it’s adults
38:17
have you ever did you ever win did you ever go one-on-one with anybody
38:23
no but it’s like it’s amazing that if when it just
38:30
suddenly goes and then the one side is the loser yeah it’s just
38:36
it’s weird it’s funny because laughing because it’s sort of like a yeah
38:43
making me homesick of the um things we’ve been working on for the upcoming exhibition that
38:49
teclavic is looking at is um you know just these sort of aspects of everyday life so you know
38:55
play and recreation is kind of one of those and you know sustenance and hunting and
39:01
um we’ve been kind of like building out these categories as a way of organizing the work
39:06
in the collection yeah we were talking
39:12
a bit about like you know the story said something about um
39:19
addressing the kind of history of how indigenous work has been shown
39:26
in institutions yeah for me like and there’s also this question about
39:32
well are things that are being presented um kind of ethnographic and just kind of
39:38
show and tell or are they are they something else and for me it’s like it’s about a celebration of the
39:45
things that are important to energy and um
39:50
wanting to show things that i think other inuit would be interested in seeing
39:57
hopefully in person if it can happen but also you know having documented or having uh
40:04
you know for discussion um showing the things that
40:10
i feel resonate with my community members and
40:16
for me it’s so um you know the every day is so
40:22
important um to celebrate in indigenous communities in inuit
40:28
communities like the the the small beautiful things or the things
40:34
that are not considered to be beautiful but that are of importance to our everyday lives
40:40
i want to celebrate those things because it’s really just amazing that we exist
40:47
if you look at these old illustrations of how people
40:52
lived and how they survived and then now you know i’m celebrating those and
40:57
then also celebrating those things those moments like the public was saying like she wanted to document them and she felt
41:03
that they were so important to document like a lot of those moments it’s like they
41:08
would just be thrown away and they’re not seen to be important they’re not fancy but um
41:14
for me they’re real treasures that’s what it’s so important uh or like
41:23
even the carnation milk which uh when i finished it was one of my prouder
41:28
moments to one of my one of the girls that would bully me growing up but we’re friends now
41:34
thing that was she really loved it and how you know she like it’s a strange thing but it’s one of
41:40
like i grew up my dad would put in our bottles and we ate it in our cereal mixed with water and
41:47
it almost feels like i’ve grown up in an older time than i actually grew up with like shelf milk or carnation or
41:54
things like this that you might not think are precious but i would call like mother’s milk and it’s on every counter
Carnation Milk
42:01
and nunu at almost every table every fridge and it’s something that would connect you even to a very mean
42:07
childhood bully [Laughter] but that we could both appreciate this
42:13
drawing um and it is something beautiful
42:18
and strange because it’s uh introduced to us um obviously by colonialism and
42:25
uh the huddler not coming in and giving us sugar and flour and
42:30
stealth milk [Music] it’s like something that people say it’s not really good but then you grew up
42:37
with it and that’s good to you you’re used to it it’s like a comforter i think i have
42:42
a can of carnation like could you know if i can now i could pilot biscuits i can you can yeah yeah
42:49
i remember like click i don’t know i actually have clicked now because i don’t know if i’d eat it but i remember growing up camping uh
42:56
and if my uncle gabriel was frying it up on a frying pan over the coleman stove and
43:01
i would literally salivate because it was just like the most delicious smell just
43:08
that you could ever imagine especially if you’re out camping and not a lot of food and your grub box is getting low
43:13
and you’re out of the junk that you brought from the northern or the co-op everything tastes amazing when you’re
43:20
camping it’s so true even if it’s fried with a few mosquitoes in there
43:28
yeah so this these are just great these are these are
43:34
the little well this is 20 21 these are um previous exhibition though
43:39
yeah really i think you were sort of looking at kind of pop pop art sort of pop culture
43:46
yes which i still want to keep continuing on and uh like there’s so many different things i
43:53
want to draw that i mean i actually have drawn but i just haven’t finished yet
43:58
but this is for the same thing sort of just everything that was on my grandmother’s table or things that were always around us or things that are on
44:03
the shelves at the northern that have always been there and they have they’re beautiful in their own way because i’m
44:09
i do appreciate marketing and i like the simplicity of uh contrasting colors that aren’t too complicated
44:16
and china lily is the best i remember the very first time i had like sushi soy sauce i had only ever had
44:23
chanally which is very strong very salty right so the very first time i had sort of the kikkoman is it
44:29
it’s more popular in nunavik i think i was told i don’t know but i think since the sushi craze
44:36
ah i feel like long after japan has moved on from sushi will still be making
44:42
a thousand years from now that’s funny well there’s something
44:48
about like uh takariki mentioned that you know that i the idea i had had about
44:54
you know sort of like looking at how we present genuine art and and you know all of that i actually
45:00
think i got those ideas from you or at least your the way you would articulated something had kind of captured my mind
45:07
because that was probably what i was thinking as well but you had written some um in relationship to another
45:14
project um you know really looking at sort of the whole tradition of owning keeping
45:19
showing um and not showing of indigenous objects right that sort of whole history of of um you know not only
45:28
um display but then how um the the way the labels are written um to the way they’re presented right so
45:34
um that really interested me because um you know like just thinking about inuit
45:40
collections and how they are typically presented it’s it’s by nature and because they’re in museums they’re
45:47
out of context and so um what it has been really amazing is to see sort of like you know these
45:53
exhibitions are coming out of relationships so you know your friendship with terelik um also um gail
46:00
cabuna who we mentioned um is uh you know the great granddaughter of jesse monarch um and has you know comes out of
46:08
a lineage of artists who she is able to sort of see in our collection and create work in response to and that is a way i
46:15
think of like you know thinking differently about exhibition right the content itself is different and how
46:21
we then talk about it is different so that every day i think is the key you know like to me it’s like aha
46:28
this light bulb went off when we did that first project but you know like through the photographs and just
46:34
thinking like oh there’s so much more uh to look at here in terms of its potential um you know
46:41
and and really important for us so i i really appreciate it sort of you know how this is evolving and the
46:46
conversations that we’re able to have with the collection and and um contemporary artists
46:53
and bringing those things together is really critical i actually think like the exhibition is not
47:00
if not it’s not that it’s not the most important thing but it is not the only
Inuit Access
47:06
important thing in dealing with um you know inuit and co and collections
47:14
um like my aim is really to have more inuit access especially older works or
47:22
new works as well um you know their relatives their community
47:27
members like i want like my personal project you see me posting on facebook and stuff is to find especially because
47:34
i know all the names in nunavik you can hear the dog screaming in the back sorry about that um
47:41
defined works by uh late family members and to
47:46
at least let family members know where those works are you know in switzerland they’re in the states they’re wherever
47:53
um but also sometimes to have some of those works come back to
47:59
two families or to bring like gail bringing gail i mean i’m not alone in this so you know a
48:05
lot of indigenous curators are doing this bringing family members or especially you know
48:12
they’re artists but even if they’re not artists to come and spend time with these objects that are
48:17
made by their late family members or they’re still living family members but they don’t have any
48:23
other way to access like i think that’s one of the things that our institutions
48:29
can continue to do and continue to build on you know like there’s all different ways
48:34
that that um this heritage this these things that are are part of us
48:41
they’re like i’ve heard you know tanya luke and linklater describe them as our relatives like they are actually
48:48
kind of living things um that are part of our culture like there’s many ways that we can
48:54
approach um to kind of heal the risk that is between
49:00
these this cultural uh heritage and and inuit today
49:07
excellent we’re so bombarded like we grew up so bombarded by like uh hundred culture outside culture mtv culture when
49:14
i was growing up you know much music all these things that seem to hold more value only because they’re like flashed in front of
49:21
us so much more and so much more aggressively and then the things that were most precious to us taken away
49:29
and stored away from and so to i’ve written um
49:34
extended art labels for uh the national gallery before too and i’m just the privilege of being able to look at our
49:41
look at like takalek was saying being able to go to guelph and just being in the presence
49:47
of basically they’re like uh gifts to us as inuit you know they’re
49:54
things that are they’re talking to us in a way that maybe would speak differently to someone who’s not enough or not from
50:01
the culture and things that were lost or seemingly lost seemingly stolen
50:06
seemingly taken away and we need to young people need to see it you know
50:12
people need to have it on their tv screens or in their libraries or somehow
50:18
more accessible like a book says it’s like if there are relations and that
50:23
that connection needs to be strong and easily accessible
50:29
like me calling for any little thing that i
50:35
am going through or anything that annoys me i think
50:40
the thing i felt growing up is you you really did feel like things were lost or there wasn’t as much that uh you could
50:47
have access to it just wasn’t there or i thought it wasn’t there but there is so much it’s with such a richness of culture
50:52
and so many of our artists are so prolific and and what they created and so many of those pieces are just sitting
50:59
away in galleries and thankfully for that because they’ve been preserved and they’ve been kept
51:04
but to be able to have inuit or indigenous creators curators uh
51:11
start getting their hands on that and somehow creating this new movement where art
51:18
maybe moves more north a little bit would be amazing
51:24
absolutely we got to get all the art out of the
51:30
usas that’s a little twilight motif i don’t remember which uh gallery it’s in or
51:36
somewhere but i would love i don’t want to go to the states for nothing right now
Dialogue
51:47
any well yeah other just to see i’m like seeing gail with her relatives work you
51:54
know and also i mean it
51:59
it also makes a really big difference to have like i’m really it’s really wonderful to work with the staff at the
52:05
art gallery of guelph you know like really welcoming um
52:10
and um not high stress
52:18
that’s a very inequality so um you know and then in the middle of the
52:24
pandemic and of course like it it actually works good because then there’s nobody there and then gail had all this
52:29
space to look at this stuff like i think um it just felt like it was meant to be
52:35
well so much of it is actually dialogue as well there was one point where you know she was working on you know looking
52:42
at work related to her family but then came to the vault because she said i just want to be here for the dialogue i
52:47
just want to be here for the conversation because to hear like you know because you know the
52:53
knowledge about the pieces comes out in conversation yeah and that’s how we sort of identify what
53:00
will be in the summer exhibition um and then start to build the relationships between you know that work
53:06
and contemporary artists so so terelik will actually be um in that summer exhibition as well so
53:13
um creating new work which is great thank you so much thank you for that opportunity so because sometimes i think
53:19
i need a little push like i’m always reading and making but uh sometimes as an artist when we’re just
53:25
trying to survive you know making earrings or jewelry or whatever following the hustle uh it’s nice to have opportunities to
53:33
to be inspired and to make stuff i love making things
53:39
and so we won’t tell what you’re making believe that it’s surprised
53:44
we won’t reveal that so because it’ll be it’s it’s an amazing element of the exhibition so
53:51
someone else will probably just kidding if we said no no no no no no no no
53:56
no that we’ve had the conversation that you’re gonna make this thing so if somebody comes along with the idea and does something else
54:02
it’s it’s it’s called convergent evolution those things happen at the same time but
54:08
they’re not necessarily connected no very true that urgency is important i feel like
54:15
too because otherwise we wouldn’t move maybe or we wouldn’t hands
54:22
it it makes decisions happen more quickly
54:27
so does anybody have any questions uh they want to ask let me just
54:34
chat here
54:39
let’s see
54:45
i’m just going to go through and actually move everybody into
54:53
we can see you all
55:00
oh yeah this drawing too ain’t a fool
55:06
i love it oh yeah it’s like something bo would draw i feel like blue insect he’s really into insects
55:13
right now
55:23
some people are let’s see it’s working i just have to do it a few
55:29
times for some people i’m not sure why
55:37
i was talking about circular i love circles too this geometry thing anyway very much i
55:42
love that one drawn to circles and i think because also because the
55:48
ingenuity of inuit i think they understand like it’s not i don’t say sacred geometry but just like the
55:53
strength of geometry in our design i think it’s evidence in the drawings as
55:58
well as uh clothing that is sown or kamuti you know all these things
56:06
i’m going to stop sharing now let’s see
Favorite Piece
56:12
does anybody have any questions you should be able to raise your hands and talk you know
56:17
or put them in the chat
56:32
no questions no questions
56:41
i’ll ask you a question what is your favorite piece in the whole show
56:48
um favorite piece of yours yeah one of each let’s do
56:54
uh your mom oh my mom
56:59
i love it i love all the busyness of it yeah
57:06
and you really capture her beautiful face um
57:15
uh oh boy it’s so hard to pick i know that’s a mean question
57:24
could be that when could be that one with the with the water
57:29
there’s nothing that’s kind of stretched out with the
57:35
um the mosquitoes and carrying i think still as indigenous
57:40
women too we still have that sense of caring like i’ve walked many a mile i
57:46
would never compare myself to our ancestors and what they went through but you know even just walking home in
57:51
the freezing cold with northern banks that’s still my favorite piece i think
57:57
yeah well you uh you searched far and wide to get a picture of a northern bank for
58:02
reference i have bucks for it that’s where that’s where
58:08
the residency and money went because there was so much research
58:14
very important very important that detail is important
58:21
i just i i you know as someone who kind of comes from a background um in you know very interested in landscape but
58:27
landscape in a really broad sense so things like the arcade and the quick stop and oh yeah you know every site
58:33
just like you know the northern store i just love that so um
58:38
you know it’s uh it’s i think it’s so important to capture those sort of like you know those everyday landscapes so
58:46
oh i love that i like i like that and then i’ll do like the tisha or like hollywood undead all these like strange
58:52
graffitis that just randomly something you that ends up being something you read and see every single day
58:58
yeah yeah and what becomes part of that you know your inner dialogue is walk through these landscapes and our
59:05
everlasting coral there’s been so many arcades i remember just loving it as a kid and then things are so temporary and
59:11
coral it seems like the fun things never seem to last very long
59:16
mm-hmm are unsustainable yeah yeah
59:22
so kai says he has no questions i just want to say i really enjoyed the presentation and loved the work you
59:27
shared with us today sean says thanks very much tayleek and sean i look forward to seeing the
59:33
exhibition next week and for coming all of you
59:40
and you have a question hello thanks thanks for this presentation very interesting to
59:46
hear the um the dialogue among among the three of you um thai lake i was looking looking up
59:53
online your your short bio and there’s a line in there i wonder if you might
59:59
speak to this just briefly it says here that um your work appeals to a wide range of customers
1:00:06
north and south especially those that appreciate her model of quote ethically
1:00:12
harvesting her materials what um what’s embodied in that line
1:00:17
oh my goodness i think a little i would jokingly sometimes say because you know there’s this whole
1:00:23
movement of like you know people who are vegan or really
1:00:29
conscious about the treatments treatment of animals and i grew up quite sensitive to
1:00:36
um animals as well which i was actually vegetarian for a long time i was very confused identity
1:00:42
kid you seen but um i would joke that i had sourced antlers sometimes that was naturally dropped so i’d say those were
1:00:48
my vegan pieces and
1:00:54
i’ve collected bones uh most of the beluga bones have been hunted and harvested for for eating and so they
1:01:01
they have been killed you know by inuit or we don’t say kill in uh you know what we say catch
1:01:08
uh because i think inuit’s idea of uh eating and our relationship to animals
1:01:14
is completely different um than uh let’s say modern people who are very
1:01:21
disconnected from the meat but there are some natural deaths so i say ethically it’s kind of uh i don’t know who wrote
1:01:28
that but i have used the word ethical and i don’t know if i like it or not because
1:01:33
i feel like it implies that there could be an unethical way of doing it but when i first stumbled upon the
1:01:39
carcasses i was just salvaging what i felt like was otherwise just rotting on the beach
1:01:46
and i could really feel the presence and the life force of the animal that was there
1:01:52
and you could just the feeling that that had already fed
1:01:58
like my community and those joyous uh feasting that happens with it and then i
1:02:04
was going to this rotting rotting gross uh carcass
1:02:09
and then sometimes when i would like knock over whatever was in the way and then there’d be like maggots and then
1:02:15
like little birdies would come and start eating uh those gross girls
1:02:23
i don’t know i think that’s i don’t know if i’m making any sense but to me i think uh
1:02:28
there was this idea of not wasting and to use what’s there and i don’t like
1:02:34
to see animal parts in the garbage uh because we do say we use every part but that’s not true so much
1:02:41
uh of everyone and it’s not so true of our modern life uh because we have the luxury of wasting now whereas before we
1:02:49
didn’t and so in my work i think people have been drawn to that and are drawn to the
1:02:54
fact that they know that it’s me going salvaging the pieces and you know i’ve
1:03:00
taken caribou heads out of the dump it’s more romantic to think of me on the
1:03:05
beach with the rotting carcasses but i’ve also taken animal parts out of the garbage or just on the
1:03:12
road if a dog’s dragged it out of somewhere like anything that’s a very enough thing
1:03:17
is to just to take something that might otherwise just be thrown away or not used and to just turn it into something
1:03:23
beautiful or useful so i don’t know if that answers your question but i try to be as
1:03:30
ethical as i can be but i can be a very unethical person [Laughter]
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i notice that you have um in since you haven’t been able to go north or travel
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during the pandemic at some points you were actually having asking people to send you things right trying to source
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more materials yeah yeah it’s it’s actually very hard because uh like uh where i go get the
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bones it’s hard to find them first of all and it’s a little bit it could be dangerous because there’s polar bears
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and then just to get someone that would actually do it and then bring it to my mom’s and then you know my dad will mail
1:04:05
it to me and one thing i loved about home too is mostly i would gather my own pieces but
1:04:10
it was nice when people come to the door too and they’re like hey do you want to buy this walrus stick for like 60 bucks or
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like whatever and i was like yes or like sometimes they just leave it there sometimes there’s like a trade that goes on but uh
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it’s it’s helpful to everyone because it’s like things that maybe
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they wouldn’t use or would end up going in the garbage something that’s valuable to me some turn into something
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um but i really do feel like it’s an honor to that especially you cannot welcome the bones or something very
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magical about what happened with me and finding the bones because it was definitely not
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something that i thought would become such a big thing it’s just something i really loved to do and i wanted to do
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and it’s i wish you could all come with me
1:05:01
you want to talk about the piece you made for the remy oh yes [Music]
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i was invited to that it’s a group exhibition uh chicken which means at the same time
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uh and i thought about this for a while but i’d like baleen as well from
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i had got some source from a local hunter and then i had a couple of pieces that my mom had
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saved from a hunt and uh bowhead whale hunting was prohibited in inuit for
1:05:31
uh i don’t actually know how many years but i do know that it was 65 years between the time my grandpa had last
1:05:37
eaten bowhead to the time that he hunted the boy for the first time and he had caught
1:05:43
a big huge forehead in coral would have been in the 90s late 90s and my mom had saved me a piece and i
1:05:49
always wanted to do something special with that um i’d use the other balance or jewelry or whatever but that particular piece i
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made into a corset and part of the reason why
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foreign whalers were hunting bowhead so much as for the oil and everything but also they were using the valine for corsets
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for european women to look smaller and and make their bodies smaller and
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inadvertently they were making inuit bodies smaller because they had taken away our food source
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and so um as i said again our relation to food is so different or was so different
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um in in that way and so it was sort of this
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conversation piece to try to say a lot in in in a way
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and honor that piece of baleen from my grandpa’s hunt and just imagine not being able to eat
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your favorite food because an outside source had come and just completely almost wiped out an entire population it
1:06:52
would never have happened if inuit have done that but yeah that’s at the raymond it’s uh shown alongside
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with a huge piece because bailing is so big it could be up to like 10 feet it’s like so massive
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and so just to end it just take this big massive whale and try to make a little skinny waist that was kind of a funny
1:07:11
thing to do to a big whale’s baleen is it right now
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yeah uh yeah until march as well i’m not actually sure how long but it’s up right now
1:07:25
i’ll have to take a look online and find an image yeah and you also have a show coming up that
1:07:31
saw oh i’m so excited about that
1:07:38
i’m very excited about the show coming up in sauce like my i feel like that’s sort of in my ballpark not that this one
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wasn’t but like it’s the pop art it’s gonna be all these images of uh
1:07:49
you know like the pop cans how i want uh and i want to do things like on a really large scale sort of the idea too like
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these big large animals that we were surrounded by two maybe big huge pop cans and china lily
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and hp sauce in in the way that i play around with syllabics and
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i like to imagine a world where what if we did see syllabics everywhere or things were always written in inuktitut
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or inappropriate was the dominant language and how that would have changed things for us growing up in our
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worldview it’s going to be so fun anyway futurism
1:08:28
yeah alternatively i’m also very capitalist right because like it’s in our it’s in my blood i got
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hudson bay blood they colonized my great-grandmother’s womb
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and so i feel like you can’t there’s a certain you can’t escape this this idea of like
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china lily running through my veins and
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carnation milk i’m made of carnation milk i’m silly but yeah i’m very i’m very
1:08:59
excited about that show and i’m very excited that you you guys invited me to do the show i feel like it opened up
1:09:05
another side of my thinking in my brain it’s your tour of ontario
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i can’t go anywhere in zoom all the time yeah well thanks so much i think um we can
1:09:21
wrap up um thank you tachylic and thank you charlie um for the incredible conversation and
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um uh thank you all for joining us um do visit the exhibition uh it will reopen
1:09:34
we will reopen on tuesday we’re open noon to five um tuesday to sundays
1:09:40
and um uh we hope you’ll all see that exhibition as well as the one that tech critic will curate for the summer that
1:09:47
will open in a few months yes and shawn says see you at our arts
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everywhere tomorrow morning yes i feel like has another panel at 9am so we’ll let you thank you so much
1:10:02
thank you all uh have a good evening and take care and we’ll see you all again soon bye to me
1:10:08
good night good night everyone
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