The Hamilton Spectator

Inuvialuk sculptor’s works shaped by cultural stories

- EMILY BLAKE

When veteran Inuvialuk sculptor David Ruben Piqtoukun hears stories from his culture, they sprout images in his mind.

Rememberin­g these stories, and combining them with modern elements, has influenced his work for decades.

A solo exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto is celebratin­g 50 years of Piqtoukun’s work. It features more than 60 sculptures, including recent pieces.

“Every work is special for me,” he says. “It comes from my heart.”

The exhibit is called Radical Remembranc­e. Piqtoukun says his work is an act of cultural resistance, reclaiming history that was stolen from him by the residentia­l school system.

Piqtoukun, who now lives in Ontario, was born in 1950 in Paulatuk, N.W.T., an Inuvialuit community in the western Arctic, where his family led a traditiona­l lifestyle. He was taken away when he was five years old to attend residentia­l school.

Piqtoukun said his work is inspired by the Inuit stories he’s heard over his lifetime, as well as songs, environmen­tal issues, elders and the materials he works with, which include stone, antler, metal and bone.

“I often embellish certain stories,” he says, adding a major one he incorporat­es into his work is that of a shaman who travels to the moon.

“A lot of people don’t understand how much memory and rememberin­g is such an act of resistance and an act of building the future for all of us,” said Wanda Nanibush, curator of the exhibit and of Indigenous art for the Art Gallery of Ontario,

Nanibush said she “fell in love” with Piqtoukun’s work and hopes people will come away from the exhibit with a new way of thinking about the Arctic.

“I also think that a lot of people have never seen the diversity of what he creates, nor the absolute beauty of it,” she said. “I wanted to make peoples’ jaws drop.”

Piqtoukun said he learned how to carve stone in the early 1970s watching his brother Abraham Anghik Ruben, also a world-renowned artist who studied at the Native Arts Centre at the University of Alaska.

“There’s something magical about this material. It felt like silk,” he recalled of his first experience carving stone.

Piqtoukun’s work has been displayed in institutio­ns across Canada and internatio­nally.

He was the first Inuk artist to be appointed to the Sculpture Society of Canada in 2000. He was recognized with a Governor General’s Award for visual and media arts in 2022.

The exhibition runs through June 25.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Inuvialuk sculptor David Ruben Piqtoukun’s exhibition “Radical Remembranc­e: The Sculptures of David Ruben Piqtoukun” is on display at the Art Gallery of Ontario until June 25.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS Inuvialuk sculptor David Ruben Piqtoukun’s exhibition “Radical Remembranc­e: The Sculptures of David Ruben Piqtoukun” is on display at the Art Gallery of Ontario until June 25.

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