NINGEOKULUK TEEVEE "Red Umbrella"

$650.00 CAD

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Medium: Lithograph - (about the technique)
The artwork is signed, titled and numbered - additionally stamped with the 'igloo' sign. This stamp is the symbol of the Kinngait studio where the artwork was made.
Created in 2015
Artwork size:  15.15" x 18.1" (38.5 x 46 cm)
Edition: 50
Certificate of Authenticity is included.

About the artist: ᓂᖑᑯᓗ ᑏᕕ
Ningiukulu Teevee (1963)

A couple of years ago I made Shaman Revealed, a drawing that was based on the Kiviuq legend of a woman turning into a fox. I wanted to show how people could change from one thing to another but still be the same person. A zipper came to mind and I thought, that’s a really nice idea, so I used the zipper to show how they change.

- Ningiukulu Teevee

© William Ritchie

Ningiukulu is one of the most versatile and intelligent graphic artists to emerge from the Kinngait Studios Born May 27, 1963, Ningiukulu is the daughter of Joanasie Salomonie (deceased) and his wife Kanajuk. Her father, Joanasie, was a community leader and much loved in Cape Dorset for his sense of humour, mischief and compassion.

In the fall of 2009, Ningiukulu ’s first children’s book was published by Groundwood Books (A Division of House of Anansi Press). Entitled Alego, it is an autobiographical story of a young girl named Alego who goes clamdigging with her grandmother for the first time and, along the way, discovers all of the wonders of the seashore. The book was short-listed for the Governor General’s Literary Award for children’s illustration.

Since her first prints appeared in the collection in 2004, Ningiukulu has been one of Kinngait’s studio’s most celebrated artists. She has a comprehensive knowledge of Inuit legends and a fine sense of design and composition. These elements that have made many of her prints highly sought after by collectors. Ningiukulu has had numerous solo shows of her bold and resplendent drawings and some of her work has been featured in exhibitions in major public galleries and museums.