Date: 1/27/2002, 7:52 am
Russ,
I'm glad to hear that you are building again. Keep us posted on the baidarka project. The information you provided is excellent. I have a great admiration and respect for all aboriginal peoples and their culture. I certainly want to show my respect with the artistic creations on our kayak.
The transformations you have chosen are wonderful. Narwals are such interesting creatures. How did you come up with them?
The community concept certainly applies to us as there are over 30 people involved in the creation of our project. We will reflect that somehow.
Thank you very much.
Greg
: Greg,
: We are currently doing something similar stripping on a bidarka.
: Yup, After a long time applying energy else where I am finallly back to boat
: building (YEah!!!!) More on htat later.
: As someone with a long appreciation of Inuit art and culture here are some
: background concepts that may be helpful. Inuit art is more then jsut a set
: of forms. To appreciate Inuit art, one msut appreciate those things that
: make Inuit culture unique.
: Some of the most facinating Inuit material comes from their culture's
: spiritual beleifs in transformations. These transitions appear many many
: times in the Inuit mythologies. These mythologies are a very rich set of
: tales passed down through long hours of story telling. I'd argue its as
: detailed and full of subtext and wisdoms as any literature on earth. These
: trasitional forms leave story telling and enter into Inuit print work and
: carvings frequently. They tend to be some of my favorite works.
: On our boat in progress we are stripping in a Narwal that transforms to an
: otter to seal to a walurus to a hunter in....a bidarka then back into the
: sea again.
: The appearance of transformations i.e. an animals spirit leaving its own body
: to enter another form is ussually done in deep flowing curves and
: occasionally mandellas. If an animal is transforming into a human form you
: will see appendages becoming hands etc. Transformations tend to be two
: tone or color representations.
: Other inuit forms tend to revolve around activites, boat building being a
: fairly common theme, so is hunting etc. Also their art work is unique in
: the way it depicts human relationships. Soap stone carvings of human bonds
: are truly wonderful. There is a connectedness and symetry between
: individuals that always implies community. THat sense of community always
: runs deep in any Inuit art forms.
: Another theme that pervades Inuit art all the way back to antiquity is joy
: and laughter. I can think of no other culture that devotes such a
: percentage of its art to the depiction of laughter. Often in combination
: with dancing. I have found myself in museums laughing along with the Gods,
: a dancing mother, a Hunter giving thanks besides a seal. If you spend
: anytime really studying Inuit art be prepared to laugh and smile.
: Finally, most art that depicts more then a scene will have as a primary
: theme, the sense of working in community. If a single individual is
: depicted it is most often describing the work he or she is doing for the
: good of all.
: Finally, if one is to understand Inuit artistic forms, one must understand
: the very real sense for things that we out side of this culture have a
: hard time beleiving and connecting with at the level of real expereince.
: This is a culture that has no word for "I." A person when
: refering to them selves in English can ussually comfortably only go so far
: as saying something like. "One could go hunting today. Translated
: " I intend to go hunting today do you want to come with me? Simply
: stated individuals thing of them selves in the terms of the community to a
: degree that may be hard for the western mind to fathom. On the one hand
: this is a culture of very wonderfully diverse characters and
: personalities, but it is also a culture of individuals that hold little
: sense for the perception of individual seperateness. This is reflected in
: the cultures art.
: THis cultures art also describes the most delicous parodox of all describing
: the deep stoic nature and quiet dignity found in combination with a joy a
: humor and laghter that is infectious and lights even 6 months of darkness.
: If you can add these into your sense of the art you will have done more then
: copied a form, but instead made your own transformation of spirit.
: Best of Luck,
: !RUSS
Messages In This Thread
- Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Greg Hughes -- 1/23/2002, 8:47 pm- Re: Other: Inuit Art Forms, Themes etc
!RUSS -- 1/26/2002, 7:10 pm- Re: Other: Inuit Art Forms, Themes etc
Greg Hughes -- 1/27/2002, 7:52 am- He's back....:D
!RUSS -- 1/27/2002, 9:52 am- welcome also
mike allen ---> -- 1/29/2002, 11:56 am- Re: Welcome back
Nick Schade - Guillemot Kayaks -- 1/28/2002, 9:16 am- Thanks for your kindness
!RUSS -- 1/29/2002, 9:25 am
- Missed you Russ---Welcome Back *NM*
John Monfoe -- 1/28/2002, 5:59 am- Re: He's back....:D
Greg Hughes -- 1/27/2002, 1:41 pm- Re: Cool Russ!
Don Beale -- 1/27/2002, 12:47 pm- Re: He's back....:D
Ken Sutherland -- 1/27/2002, 12:31 pm - Re: Welcome back
- welcome also
- He's back....:D
- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
KenB -- 1/24/2002, 1:17 pm- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Greg Hughes -- 1/24/2002, 5:47 pm- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Jim Chapple -- 1/24/2002, 11:45 pm
- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks *Pic*
Chip Sandresky -- 1/24/2002, 12:29 pm- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Shawn Baker -- 1/24/2002, 2:25 pm
- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Nick Schade - Guillemot Kayaks -- 1/24/2002, 10:02 am- Re: Other: Inuit Art on Kayaks
Wesley Gross -- 1/24/2002, 9:26 am - Re: Other: Inuit Art Forms, Themes etc
- Re: Other: Inuit Art Forms, Themes etc