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Alaska on M
adison
 

Dear friends,

Please visit us in person or online to see our new acquisitions. Of course, we can only highlight a fraction of our selections in newsletters and on the website. If you are looking for a particular artist, subject or community, please contact us and we will be happy to assist you.

Join us at the Antique American Indian Art Show in Santa Fe

Opening Tuesday, August 19 6-9 pm
Wednesday and Thursday, August 20-21 
11 am-6 pm

We will be in Booth C-1 with an exciting collection of masks and other objects from the Northwest Coast and Alaska. 
 
 
Coming soon:
Women of the Kivalliq and Kitikmeot 
September 11 - October 15
 
Please join us in the gallery for an opening reception Thursday, September 11 from 6:00-8:30 p.m. for Women of the Kivalliq and Kitikmeot
This exhibition will feature the work of 22 women from communities west of Hudson's Bay: Arviat, Baker Lake, Coppermine, Rankin Inlet and Taloyoak. 
 

 

Carving began in these communities in the late 1950s, about ten years after the communities of Arctic Quebec and Baffin Island. Generally, the local stone in the western communities is much denser and harder to work than the serpentine of southern Baffin Island.  This has led to a marked difference in regional styles, with many of the artists of the Kivalliq and the Kitikmeot working in an abstract, minimalist style.

 

 

 

 In Baker Lake, Jessie Oonark started producing graphics in 1959, leading to a flourishing graphics program in the 1960s and 1970s. My Dream of a Person with Birds (left) is an excellent example of her strong design elements.  A number of women also produced distinctive wallhangings, using appliqué and embroidery techniques.  In contrast to the spare style of the carvings, the graphics and wallhangings explode with color and dramatic designs.

 

 

Like their male counterparts, the women of the western communities tended to favor human subjects -- individual men and women, and mother-and-child compositions -- but there were notable exceptions. Maudie Okittuq of Taloyoak and Peggy Ekagina of Coppermine created fascinating transformation pieces. A shaman by Camille Iquliq of Baker Lake shows how minor physical differences can transform an ordinary man into a powerful spirit.  

 

 

 
 
About Us

 

Alaska on Madison is a gallery of indigenous art of Alaska and Canada run by collectors for collectors. We feature Inuit art of the twentieth and twenty-first century Canadian Arctic,  two-thousand-year-old objects from the Old Bering Sea cultures, and nineteenth century art from the Northwest Coast peoples and Yup'ik Eskimos. Our collection ranges from museum-quality works to more modest but still excellent works for private collectors, whether novice or sophisticated. We also have a selection of books that will enhance your appreciation of your collection. 

 

Baffled by syllabic signatures? Learn how to interpret them by using our guide, Deciphering Inuktitut Signatures, and our Inuit Artist Search Tool.

 

Regular gallery hours are Tuesday - Saturday 1:30 - 6:00 pm, but it's always a good idea to call or email in advance in case we have an appointment out of the gallery.  The gallery will be closed August 15 through August 25, 2014.

 

Visit our website 

 

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Alaska on Madison | 1065 Madison Avenue, Second Floor | Between 80th and 81st Streets | New York | NY | 10028