Spirit Wrestler Gallery

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These pages are an archive of an exhibition the Spirit Wrestler Gallery held in 2005.

If an item is not marked as "sold" then it may still be available. Please contact the gallery to inquire.

 

LUCY TASSEOR TUTSWEETOK
Web Exhibition

Vncluded in the 1970 Sculpture Exhibition organized as part of the Centennial for the Northwest Territories, Lucy Tasseor was also one of the Keewatin (tundra) artists selected for the key exhibition, "Sculpture/Inuit: Masterworks of the Canadian Arctic", which toured internationally from 1971-1973. Immediately recognizable for her signature style, the artist has long been regarded as one of the principal exponents of the austere minimalist style that we have associated with the community of Arviat—and she has continued to show extensively at a national/international level for the last three and a half decades.

"Lucy Tasseor Tutsweetok was born just south of the N.W.T. border in Nunalla, Manitoba in 1934. After her father’s death Tasseor lived with her grandparents in and around Nunalla and Churchill. Tasseor married Richard Tutsweetok in Rankin Inlet in 1960, and moved to Arviat, N.W.T. soon after. She began carving in the early 1960s.

Tasseor drew inspiration from the memories of sand drawings that she and her grandfather (whom she considers to be the greatest influence on her life) had made when she was a child. Her sculptures, representing mothers and children or family groups, are carved in a semi-abstract style in which the human figure is rarely defined. Tasseor works the stone very sparingly, leaving large undulating surfaces uncarved, decorated with incised drawings. For Tasseor, a flat stone plane has as much expressive power as a face. Human subjects are suggested by faces, arms and legs that emerge from the stone, often only along the edges of the carving. Subtle variations in the positioning or expression of heads and faces provide clues to understanding the meaning of specific sculptures. Tasseor herself assigns very specific meanings or moods to each of her works."

—excerpted from Ingo Hessel, Visions of Power, 1991.

1 Mother With Children sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 4 x 2.5 x 1"
Ref: L30106
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2 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 4.75 x 2 x 2"
Ref: L30105
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3 Hunting Group Composition sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 8 x 6.25 x 3.5"
Ref: T61129
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4 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 5 x 2 x 2"
Ref: L30104
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5 Mother and Child sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 8 x 6 x 4"
Ref: T30207
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6 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 6.5 x 9 x 6"
Ref: N30202
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7 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 8.5 x 9 x 3"
Ref: L01205
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8 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 7 x 7 x 4"
Ref: N40421
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9 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 8.5 x 9 x 3"
Ref: L01203
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10 Family Group sold
Medium: Basalt
Size: 16 x 6 x 12"
Ref: L01202
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