Inuit Art Quarterly

Ningiukulu Teevee

- by Kerry Goodfellow

Ningiukulu Teevee is one of many contempora­ry Inuit ar tists in the Global Af fairs Canada Visual Ar t Collection whose work personifie­s the theme of legacy. Born in 1963, Teevee is largely a self-taught ar tist. She released her first print in the 2004 Cape Dorset Annual Print Collection and has been a mainstay in the Dorset Fine Arts roster ever since. Teevee is an establishe­d cultural ambassador for the remarkable talent produced in Kinngait Studios. She was featured in a 2017 solo exhibition,

Ningiukulu Teevee: Kinngait Stories organized by the Winnipeg Art Gallery and presented at the Canada Galler y in the Canadian Embassy in Washington, DC.

Her work in both printmakin­g and drawing are characteri­zed by her innate sense of compositio­n, bold colour, fluid use of pat terning and, above all, her ability to share stories infused with humour. The majority of Teevee’s drawings in the collection incorporat­e stories and legends passed on to her by Elders in her community—she notes the late Mialia Jaw (1934–2006) as a great inspiratio­n. However, her large-scale tripartite pastel drawing, Generation­s (2017), is unique among a body of works rooted in ever yday life and por trayed with a strong female perspectiv­e, highlighti­ng the bonds of family and community.

Teevee depicts two women wearing amautiit, leggings, sneakers and carr ying purses. The woman in blue gazes at the child she carries in her amauti. The eldest child is a young girl dressed in a hoodie and jeans, who lovingly helps the little boy wearing a baseball hat empty dirt out of his rubber boot. The scene captures life in Kinngait, providing insight into the daily reality of a resilient culture that blends traditiona­l and contempora­ry elements and influences from the South.

Teevee says the inspiratio­n for the work was a memorable moment while walking on a dir t road with her family. Through the protracted time lapse of drawing, she portrays an ephemeral moment in a family’s daily outing as if it was a snapshot from her memory. The figures, theatrical­ly set against a black backdrop, highlight the importance of family—grandmothe­rs, mothers, daughtersi­n-law, aunties, cousins and children—and speaks to female strength and the continuum of tradition, values and knowledge passed on to the next generation. There is a large area of negative space to the right of the lit tle boy, which opens the compositio­n to reflection­s on the continuing cycle.

Generation­s is on display in Canada’s Embassy in Paris, France, alongside other works by ar tists that highlight themes of the environmen­t, climate change and internatio­nal ef for ts to seek collective actions, such as the Paris Climate Accord. In Generation­s, Teevee places all emphasis on the figures and their interrelat­ion, while the environmen­t in which they live is conspicuou­sly absent. Although Generation­s may not directly address the environmen­t, when considered in the context of the embassy installati­on it animates conversati­on about both cultural and environmen­tal sur vival and resilience, and the legacy we must collective­ly leave for the next generation.

Kerry Goodfellow is the Curator and Manager of the Global Af fairs Canada Visual Ar t Collection—a federally owned and operated collection displayed in representa­tional spaces of Canada’s embassies, consulates and official residences in over 100 cities around the world. Its purpose is to exhibit contempora­r y Canadian ar t, reflecting the rich and diverse cultural heritage of Canada and to suppor t cultural diplomacy ef for ts abroad.

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Ningiukulu Teevee
(b. 1963 Kinngait)
—
Generation­s
2017
Coloured pencil
123 × 240 cm REPRODUCED WITH
PERMISSION DORSET FINE ARTS GLOBAL AFFAIRS CANADA VISUAL ART COLLECTION
© THE ARTIST
BELOW Ningiukulu Teevee (b. 1963 Kinngait) — Generation­s 2017 Coloured pencil 123 × 240 cm REPRODUCED WITH PERMISSION DORSET FINE ARTS GLOBAL AFFAIRS CANADA VISUAL ART COLLECTION © THE ARTIST
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