Flywheel Test

Biography

Jessie (Una) Oonark (1906-1985) was born near the Back River, Nunavut and was named after her paternal grandfather, Oonark. As a member of the Utkusiksalingmiut people, a semi-nomadic group of Inuit that depended on caribou hunting and fishing, Jessie Oonark lived the first fifty years of her life in camps throughout the region. She pursued traditional tasks, such as processing and sewing caribou and sealskin, to produce clothing; the aesthetic qualities of this work would later influence her depiction of Inuit life in drawings and tapestries. In the 1950s, Oonark and her children settled in Baker Lake, NU due to a decline in Caribou populations as well as the market for Arctic fox furs. Oonark first began making drawings in the late 1950s [1]. Her works quickly caught the attention of members of both the Baker Lake and Cape Dorset art communities. A few short years after beginning her drawing career, several of Oonark’s drawings were included in the Cape Dorset Print Collections of 1960 and 1961; she is the only artist from outside of Cape Dorset to ever be included [2]. From her home, and eventually from a small studio in Baker Lake, Oonark’s complex and vivid visual world unfolded. She employed bright colours in her depiction of humans, spirits and animals, creating vibrant works that draw the viewer in through pictorial storytelling. Often, Oonark’s visual narratives focus on Inuit women, conveying their strength and power within traditional depictions of domestic activities [3]. Discussing one of Oonark’s early drawings, Robert Enright describes “the whimsical, awkward gestures the figures make", noting that, "the colours in the drawings speak unequivocally about Oonark’s uncompromising celebration of Inuit life.” An apt description of Oonark’s work, which can be applied to her oeuvre, in general. The central figure in her drawing, Big Woman (1974), takes up the entirety of the page. The woman’s amautik, or parka, is represented using striking colours and geometric patterns, complementing the design of her traditional facial tattoos. Two ulus, or woman’s knives, protrude out of either side of her head and seated on atop it is a second, relatively small figure [5]. Oonark, who was once described as speaking very poetically, said that she depicted her dreams; the realities of Inuit life and the dream-like world she imagined are both present in Big Woman. In addition to drawing, Oonark produced Wall hangings, one of which hangs in the National Arts Centre, Ottawa. The tapestry commissioned by Bill and Jean Teron was unveiled in May 1973; it hung in the foyer of the arts centre until 1994 when it was removed to be included in Oonark’s travelling retrospective [6]. When it returned to the NAC, the tapestry was put in storage until 2013 when it was restored and re-hung for public display.

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January 17, 2024 Created by: Inuit Art Foundation