快盈v3

Skip to content

Fantasy, reality, nostalgia: Nunavut鈥檚 Shuvinai Ashoona among Governor General鈥檚 Awards winners

web1_20240305140328-78c0a886102532eb1ef9d146e98a16bf7fbbb9688a803fbc55142b9c2321623f
鈥淔or me, drawings can come from what I see out there or what I don鈥檛 see around me. Every time I draw something, it helps me to understand what I see and also what鈥檚 going on in my imagination,鈥 says Kinngait鈥檚 Shuvinai Ashoona. The Canadian Press photo

Dozens, maybe hundreds, of Inuit artists have sketched polar bears. Only one is likely to have sketched polar bears sketching people.

She may also be the only Inuk to have drawn hunters taking aim at a walrus the size of an apartment block. Or octopuses with human legs and multiracial faces. Or a parka-clad woman juggling two worlds while giving birth to a third. Or works inspired by the Titanic. Or Godzilla.

Welcome to the world of Shuvinai Ashoona, the global art star from Kinngait, whose unique blend of fantasy, realism and nostalgia have made her one of the latest recipients of the Governor General鈥檚 Awards in the arts, Canada鈥檚 highest visual and media arts award.

鈥淔or me, drawings can come from what I see out there or what I don鈥檛 see around me,鈥 Ashoona told The Canadian Press in an email. 鈥淓very time I draw something, it helps me to understand what I see and also what鈥檚 going on in my imagination.鈥

The artist, 62, prefers to conduct interviews through written questions translated into her native Inuktitut.

鈥淒ifferent people see so many different things when they look at drawings,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l see things in a way that I hadn鈥檛 even thought of myself.鈥

Five other artists were also awarded: Barbara Astman of Toronto, whose photo-based work is in the Canadian Embassy in Berlin and on the cover of an album by the band Loverboy Montreal-based Dominique Blain, known for politically charged large-scale sculpture and installations Don Ritter, a Montreal artist whose sound and visual installations have been shown in 23 countries photographer Greg Staats, who looks at nature through Indigenous and settler lenses and Saskatchewan Metis documentarian Marjorie Beaucage, who has made 40 films.

Ashoona, whose work is shown across the country and around the world, comes from a long line of artists working out of the West Baffin Cooperative in Kinngait.

Her father, Kiugak Ashoona, and mother, Sorosilutu Ashoona, were both well known. Her grandmother, Pitseolak Ashoona, was one of the foremost Inuit artists of her time. Her cousin Annie Pootoogook won worldwide praise before her tragic and early death.

Shuvinai Ashoona spent plenty of time around West Baffin鈥檚 studios when she was young. But she was not an art kid.

鈥淲e鈥檇 play in the yard with older students during recess, and after school we鈥檇 visit our classmates at home,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淚鈥檇 spend summer camping with Mom and Dad, and sometimes we鈥檇 have cousins camping with us.

鈥淲hen I was younger, I wasn鈥檛 really interested in making art. I spent most of my time studying at school and at home. We did have art class at school. But at the time, I wasn鈥檛 very interested.鈥

She credits her sister Goota 鈥 an artist and one of 11 Ashoona siblings 鈥 with getting her started drawing in about 1996.

Patricia Feheley of Toronto鈥檚 Feheley Fine Arts, which has shown Ashoona鈥檚 work since 2006, has known the family since that time.

鈥淯p there, you need a way to live,鈥 Feheley said. 鈥(Goota) felt Shuvinai was talented.鈥

Feheley recalls how the tiny pencil drawings Ashoona started with just kept getting bigger, more colourful 鈥 and weirder. Eventually, detailed documentary drawings gave way to entire sheets covered with brightly coloured eggs or a family confronting a rock crawling with what look to be cats with tentacles.

鈥淪he was literally letting her mind run amok.鈥

Yet traditional Inuit imagery such as seals and skin tents keep popping up. And that鈥檚 the key, said Robert Kardosh of the Marion Scott Gallery in Vancouver, which has also mounted many Ashoona shows.

鈥淪ometimes in the same image she will juxtapose those two things 鈥 fairly naturalistically rendered people in their parkas in this fantastical world of creatures. Her vision can be very much not of this world.鈥

Inspiration can come from the everyday world around her, Ashoona said. But it rarely ends there.

鈥淚 see a lot of things on television and in books and magazines. And sometimes I鈥檓 interested in using those things in my artwork, like the way that I use things from my community, what鈥檚 around me and what I鈥檓 imagining.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where my work is going until I start to draw, and sometimes it even becomes something totally different than what I was thinking.鈥

Feheley has watched her work. Ashoona once started a piece by carefully drawing a hair braid in the middle of the sheet. Slowly, gradually, everything emerged around it.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no preliminary sketches,鈥 Feheley said. 鈥淪he just goes into it. That mind is just always everywhere.鈥

So is the art. Ashoona鈥檚 work has been shown to astonishment and praise in London, Venice, Sydney, Miami, New Mexico and Massachusetts. It hangs in Canadian public galleries and private collections from coast to coast. She regularly collaborates with artists in the south.

鈥淚 call her a super-connector,鈥 said Kardosh.

鈥淪he bridges realms of experience in her work. She manages to say something about her specific locale, but she embraces the global vision, too.鈥

Ashoona鈥檚 work captivates a wide audience that goes far beyond a simple fascination with the Arctic, Feheley said.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no one else like her. Regardless of whether you鈥檙e from Australia or Germany, these images she creates just resonate with people.鈥

Governor General鈥檚 Awards winners receive a medal and $25,000. The citation for Ashoona鈥檚 award says she鈥檚 never content to follow rules and expectations.

鈥淎shoona鈥檚 unconventional artistic vision has successfully challenged and revolutionized how the public perceives Inuit art and contemporary Indigenous art more generally, helping to create a new space for expression and artistic freedom,鈥 it says.

For Ashoona, it鈥檚 simpler.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 even think about getting awards,鈥 she said.

鈥淚鈥檓 very happy that people come to see my drawings. I want everyone to see my artwork.鈥

鈥擝y Bob Weber, The Canadian Press





(or

快盈v3

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }