How Inuit Artists Came Together to Establish Nunavik’s First Co-op

Critical Text: Levi Qumaluk, Aisa Qoperqualu, Charlie Sivuarapik and Peter Amautik’s legacy in Puvirnituq.

ᓴᖅᑭᑎᑦᑎᓂᖅ ᓯᓚᕐᔪᐊᑉ ᑲᓇᖕᓇᖓᓂᑦ ᐱᓕᕆᖃᑎᒌᖕᓂᖅ ᑭᒡᒐᖅᑐᐃᔩᑦ
Black stone carving of a mother with a child in the hood of her coat. She is looking down while wringing a hide in her hands, the child is holding a knife.

The Puvirnituq Co-op, which opened in 1960, was one of the first successful artist co-operatives in Nunavik.

Stonecut block print in black ink on white paper of a hunter with a harpoon and a walrus. Between them are various hunting implements.
Levi Qumaluk, Untitled (Hunter and Walrus) (1965). COURTESY WADDINGTON’S AUCTIONEERS AND APPRAISERS, TORONTO.

The lifeblood of the Puvirnituq co-operative movement included artists like Levi Qumaluk, Aisa Qoperqualu, Charlie Sivuarapik and Peter Amautik, who worked hard to produce artwork and establish a membership co-operative after the Hudson’s Bay Company manager announced they were considering ceasing the purchase of local arts and crafts. Local men like Peter Murdoch and Father André Steinmann helped these artists to learn about and research what was needed to establish a successful co-operative. These Inuit artists travelled with Father Steinmann to southern cities like Toronto, ON, Montreal, QC, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to scout out interest in a burgeoning Inuit art market. With a career spanning more than 60 exhibitions across Canada and the United States, Levi Qumaluk was a prolific carver and printmaker from Puvirnituq, Nunavik, QC. In the early days of the co-op, Qumaluk often contributed money he earned selling his art to pay co-op staff, who would otherwise have gone without wages.

Black stone carving of a mother with a child in the hood of her coat, she is looking down while wringing a hide in her hands, the child is holding a knife
Levi Qumaluk, Mother with Child in her Amautiq (c.1967). COURTESY WADDINGTON’S AUCTIONEERS AND APPRAISERS, TORONTO.

“The co-op was started by a group of carvers, including my father, Aisa [Qoperqualu], and uncle Levi [Qumaluk]. It was not started by just one worker or manager, but several men who wanted to get together to help each other sell their carvings [at] fair prices. I was still a little boy when they opened the co-op, but I learned a lot from those men. Especially my uncles and grandfather, Qumaluk. 

I remember the first time I tried carving, I was four years old. I was watching my grandfather and I asked him to buy me something from the store when he sold his carving. He said, “No, I’m not going to do it for you; if you want something from the store you have to do it for yourself.” He knew he would not always be there in my life so he taught me to do the work. So I tried carving, I carved a rough shape of a man and he finished the details for me. My older brother and I learned to be carvers by watching our family, our uncles and grandfather and father.”                                                                                           

—Peter Boy Ittukallak, Carver and Hunting Guide

Author Biography: 

Napatsi Folger is an Inuk comic artist, fiction, non-fiction, and children’s literature writer from Iqaluit, NU. She now lives in Vancouver, BC where she attended UBC to complete an MFA in the Creative Writing Program. Folger is an Associate Editor for Inuit Art Quarterly.

Credit: This article was originally published by the Inuit Art Quarterly on October 21, 2021. Copyright the Inuit Art Foundation.

Original Published link: https://www.inuitartfoundation.org/iaq-online/how-inuit-artists-came-together-to-establish-nunavik-s-first-co-op

 

This story is part of the Nunavik Spotlight. View more content from the Spotlight here.