A Q&A with the curators of INUA
Qaumajuq’s inaugural exhibition is historic in itself—for the first time ever, a curatorial team represents all four regions of Inuit…
Indigenous Sovereignty
ch’i cha jų̃ kwa’ch’e
Dän däw Kwenjè
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Trained at the Tuukkaq Theatre in Fjaltring (northern Jutland, Denmark), and at the Greenland Art School in Nuuk, (where she later served as Director), Kleemann’s work moves between traditional Inuit performance practices and contemporary approaches influenced by a variety of cultures and movements. Kleemann’s intense presence as a performance artist often relies on integrating traditional elements of mask dance with more experimental body art practices, regularly working with blubber, beads, rope, the Arctic landscape and her own nude body. She describes this hybrid method of working as a way of activating Kalaallit cultural practices: treating them as living, thriving ways of encountering the world and attending to the nuances and shifts in contemporary Inuit identities. In working with these materials in relation to her own body, she interrogates their Indigenous and colonial histories—and the complexities of memory, commodification, spirituality and violence they hold.
A notable example of Kleemann’s untangling of culture, trade, subsistence, exploitation, climate and colonization is her ongoing work with seal blubber, including the 2012 installation ORSOQ, which was shown at the Liverpool Biennial and acquired by the National Gallery of Denmark in 2020. Celebrating seal fat as an element of traditional Inuit food and food systems, exploring histories of stigmatization of traditional foods, and addressing its prominence as a trade commodity sought after by the Danish, English and Portuguese to be used as lamp fuel, the installation incorporates bottles of rendered seal blubber to tell a story about climate, resources, land, tradition and inherited narratives about what it means to be “civilized.”
In her practice as a poet, Kleemann takes up similar themes. Like much of her poetry, her most recent collection of poems from 2021, Arkhticós Dolorôs (Arctic Pain), moves between English, Danish and Kalaallisut languages. These shifts in language correspond to an exploration of questions of translation, colonization, climate and the other major cross-cultural challenges of this moment, firm in the belief that Inuit language, culture and knowledge have an important role to play in how we move forward.
We, the hosts and organizers of Arctic Arts Summit 2022, recognize and respect the many languages of the circumpolar region. Zhän kwändür English ye French, Kwânje ke keni, ka Inuktut Shu, Yukon Yu Southern Tuchone kwänje ach’e. Yukon Yu äłeshèdadäl 2022 k’e, Southern Touche ghäkwije yu kwänun kay kwatch’e. The discursive and artistic content on this platform will be available in the language in which it was submitted and/or created.
Aka’ndür dän k’e, ghàndà, kwädàch’el.
View in English | View in French | View in Inuktut
Zhän kwändür English ye French, Kwânje ke keni, ka Inuktut Shu, Yukon Yu Southern Tuchone kwänje ach’e. Yukon Yu äłeshèdadäl 2022 k’e, Southern Touche ghäkwije yu kwänun kay kwatch’e.
Dànun ghà’ich’e ka shäwghanįthän nunkaiy kwäts’än dän ye äde-saidi-ye yu! Ūnų̃ kwattha’al kwadäw.
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