Inuit Art Quarterly

Kupapik Ningeochea­k b. 1970 Salliq, NU

-

In a career spanning almost 25 years, played out over communitie­s across Nunavut, carver Kupapik Ningeochea­k has created a body of work that includes everything from arctic animals to hockey players. In fact, in 2000 the National Hockey League commission­ed the artist to create Inuk Player (2000) for the Visions of Hockey collection, a fitting addition from the artist who himself was a recreation­al director for hockey programs in Sanikiluaq, NU. Aside from figures of sport, Ningeochea­k focuses primarily on depicting birds, owls, muskoxen and transforma­tion scenes. He credits some of his mentors for their inspiratio­n to make transforma­tion and spiritual scenes. “I started carving with George Arluk and Alex Alikashuak,” he says of his early career. “They made transforma­tions and abstract things and I began to make them too.” Now an establishe­d artist, Ningeochea­k has developed his own unique style characteri­zed by artworks that carry incredible mass and presence. His owls are squat, with balloonrou­nd heads and beady, inset eyes. With deep-set sockets and heavy brows, the faces of the artist’s transforma­tion figures are often mysterious, their lack of detail leaving room for intrigue. Ningeochea­k currently lives in Salliq (Coral Harbour), NU, and uses the tough local stone. He quarries his own and when he finds a good deposit, he keeps the location a secret, “but the other artists always hear anyways.”

– Emily Henderson

 ??  ?? Kupapik Ningeochea­k (b. 1970 Salliq)
wl
2016
Stone and antler
12 × 14 × 7.6 cm COURTESY FEHELEY FINE ARTS ᖁᑉᐹᐱᒃ ᓂᖏᐅᑦᓯᐊᖅ (b. 1970 ᓴᓪᓖᑦ) — ᐅᒃᐱᒃ 2016 ᐅᔭᕋᖅ ᐊᒻᒪ ᓇᒡᔪ 12 × 14 × 7.6 ᓯᓐᑕᒦᑕᔅ ᐊᐃᑦᑐᖅᑕᐅᔪᖅ ᕕᕼᐃᓕ ᓴᓇᖕᖑᐊᖅᓯᒪᔪᕆ­ᔨᒃᑯᑦ
Kupapik Ningeochea­k (b. 1970 Salliq) wl 2016 Stone and antler 12 × 14 × 7.6 cm COURTESY FEHELEY FINE ARTS ᖁᑉᐹᐱᒃ ᓂᖏᐅᑦᓯᐊᖅ (b. 1970 ᓴᓪᓖᑦ) — ᐅᒃᐱᒃ 2016 ᐅᔭᕋᖅ ᐊᒻᒪ ᓇᒡᔪ 12 × 14 × 7.6 ᓯᓐᑕᒦᑕᔅ ᐊᐃᑦᑐᖅᑕᐅᔪᖅ ᕕᕼᐃᓕ ᓴᓇᖕᖑᐊᖅᓯᒪᔪᕆ­ᔨᒃᑯᑦ

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada