Fisherwoman
Availability: Only 1 available
CA$2,800.00
Only 1 available
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Layaway
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- Description
- Additional Information
- Artist Bio
Serpentine, Caribou Antler, Sinew
Dimensions | 12.25 x 8.5 x 11" (31.12 x 21.59 x 27.94cm) |
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Product Number | I-92279 |
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Artist | Johnny Lee Pudlat |
Nation | Cape Dorset |
Description | Cape Dorset Johnny Lee Pudlat was born on December 7, 1971 in Iqaluit – formerly known as Frobisher Bay – located on the southeastern tip of Baffin Island. His father, the late Saila Pudlat, was a well-known carver. His mother, Padloo Saila Pudlat, is also an artist and still carves toady. Johnny Lee currently resides in Cape Dorset. As with most Cape Dorset artists, Johnny Lee prefers to carve depictions of animals native to the Arctic. |
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As goddess of the ocean, Sedna sets strict rules about the proper way to treat the animals of the hunt, which the Inuit require for sustenance. This includes proper treatment of the animals’ spirit when killed for food. If she feels the rules have been broken, she cuts off the supply of food. When this happens, the Inuit tribal shaman is required to take a mystical journey to the bottom of the ocean to speak to the goddess. It is considered the most dangerous journey an Inuit shaman is called upon to make.
Upon arrival at the bottom of the sea the shaman is required to comb Sedna’s hair, because Sedna has no fingers to comb it herself, and to find out what the tribe has done wrong that the food has been cut off. The shaman then makes a deal with Sedna, promising that if the tribe corrects whatever transgressions it has made, the goddess will return their food supply. The shaman then returns to the tribe with the list of things the goddess requires to be done to get the food back.