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$20.95
"Dancing Bears" matted print measures approximately 8"x6", and is double matted with white mats. Overall measurements: 11"x14", portrait orientation. The matted and framed print is double matted with white mats and metal framing measuring 12" x 14.25".
Dawn Oman is a direct descendant of Chief Snuff, Chief of the Yellow Knives, one of the signers of the original Treaty 8 with the Government of Canada. After moving to Vancouver as a teenager, she began seriously applying herself to her art. In 1995 she moved back to Yellowknife and she opened her own gallery in 1999. She continues to paint and welcome visitors and collectors from across Canada and around the world.
$19.99
Made in Canada
Personalize your Canadian Art Print to mark any event or special occasion! We can create customized engraved plates for all framed prints.
To order your engraved plate, first add the framed art print to your shopping cart (be sure to choose a framed print). Then add the engraved plate and select either "glass mounted" or "frame mounted" from the drop down menu. Please include the text to be engraved on the plaque in the "Special Instructions" area of your shopping cart. You will receive a confirmation email including the information that is to be engraved.
$43.95
Made in Nunavut
My Father's Inukshuk - Germaine Arnaktauyok
This individually signed and number limited edition Inuit art print was printed in Iqaluit, Nunavut and features the Germaine Arnaktauyok print "My Father's Inukshuk".
Cultural Background: Inuit
"I never questioned being an artist."
Germaine Arnaktauyok is renowned for her talents as an illustrator and master print maker. The daughter of carvers Therese Nattok and Isidore Lytok, she started to draw on any material available while still a young girl in Igloolik. When she was sent to a residential school at Chesterfield Inlet at the age of nine, she met a nun who gave her art lessons. Germaine sold her first painting at the age of 11.
Germaine has studied Fine Arts at the University of Manitoba and Commercial Art at Algonquin College in Ottawa. Germaine developed her print making style at the Arctic College and Arts Induvik Canada. Germaine Arnaktauyok has illustrated several children's books and her work is featured in children's books from the Baffin Divisional Board of Education.
The ideas for Germaine's work stem from traditional Inuit legends and from living and witnessing the unique lifestyle of her people. Her unique, paradoxical character parallels her creative sensibilities: she is a simple woman, yet sophisticated; proud, yet modest; contemporary urban yet traditionally rural. As for subject matter, Germaine is particularly interested in female entities and concerns - the sea goddess Sedna, creation and birth - which are expressed in very personal ways that humanize the subject.
Germaine's image on an Inuit drum dancer now appears on the 2000 edition of the Canadian $2 coin.
This matted limited edition print measures 11" x 13"
$43.95
Made in Nunavut
Spirit Moon - Germaine Arnaktauyok
This individually signed and number limited edition Inuit art print was printed in Iqaluit, Nunavut and features the Germaine Arnaktauyok print "Spirit Moon".
Cultural Background: Inuit
"I never questioned being an artist."
Germaine Arnaktauyok is renowned for her talents as an illustrator and master print maker. The daughter of carvers Therese Nattok and Isidore Lytok, she started to draw on any material available while still a young girl in Igloolik. When she was sent to a residential school at Chesterfield Inlet at the age of nine, she met a nun who gave her art lessons. Germaine sold her first painting at the age of 11.
Germaine has studied Fine Arts at the University of Manitoba and Commercial Art at Algonquin College in Ottawa. Germaine developed her print making style at the Arctic College and Arts Induvik Canada. Germaine Arnaktauyok has illustrated several children's books and her work is featured in children's books from the Baffin Divisional Board of Education.
The ideas for Germaine's work stem from traditional Inuit legends and from living and witnessing the unique lifestyle of her people. Her unique, paradoxical character parallels her creative sensibilities: she is a simple woman, yet sophisticated; proud, yet modest; contemporary urban yet traditionally rural. As for subject matter, Germaine is particularly interested in female entities and concerns - the sea goddess Sedna, creation and birth - which are expressed in very personal ways that humanize the subject.
Germaine's image on an Inuit drum dancer now appears on the 2000 edition of the Canadian $2 coin.
This matted limited edition print measures 11" x 13"
$20.95
"Resplendent Owls" print measures approximately 8"x6", and is double matted with white mats. Overall measurements: 14"x11", landscape orientation. The matted and framed print is double matted with white mats and metal framing measuring 12" X 14.25".
Kenojuak Ashevak Cultural Background: Inuit from Ikirasaq, southern coast of Baffin Island.
Like many Inuit artists, Kenojuak Ashevak has spent most of her life living on the land in a manner not unlike that of her ancestors. She was born at the south Baffin Island camp of Ikirisaq, and grew up travelling from camp to camp in Canada’s Eastern Arctic.
Kenojuak first began experimenting with drawing and stone carving in the late 1950s. Her early work appeared in the Cape Dorset Annual Graphics Collections, launching a career that would include numerous national and international commissions, special projects and exhibitions. Her life and art have been the subject of a film produced by the National Film Board of Canada, and a book entitled “Graphic Arts of the Inuit: Kenojuak”, published in 1981.
Kenojuak Ashevak has been accorded many honours for her achievements. She received the Order of Canada in 1967, and was subsequently elevated to Companion of the Order. In 1993, Kenojuak was awarded Honourary Degrees from both Queen’s University and the University of Toronto. She passed away in 2013 at the age of 85.