Inuit Art Online Auction

June 02, 2016

LOT 260

Lot 260

MANASIE AKPALIAPIK

MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
Lot 260 Details
MANASIE AKPALIAPIK, Toronto

ANGRY SWIMMING SEDNA

bone, horn, stone
1988
12.25" x 10.25" x 5" — 31.1 x 26 x 12.7 cm.

Estimate $1,000-$1,500

Realised: $1,200
Price Includes Buyer's Premium ?

Lot Report

Additional Images
MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
  • MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
  • MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
  • MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
  • MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
  • MANASIE AKPALIAPIK
Provenance:

Images Art Gallery, Toronto
Private collection, Toronto

Literature:

Franz Boas, “Sedna and the Fulmar”, from “The Central Eskimo” from Sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, 1888, p.409-669 (1888), 1964, p. 583ff.

Charles Moore, Keeveeok, Awake! (Ring House Gallery, Edmonton, AB) p. 9-10

Darlene Wight, Manasie: The Art of Manasie Akpaliapik (The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg, MB), 1990, unpaginated

Note:

Accounts of the origins of the sea goddess differentiate throughout the arctic regions. 

Franz Boas tells of Senda’s origins as a mortal girl that would not marry and whose “father [cut] off her fingers, which [were] transformed into whales, seals, and ground seals.”  Here, Manasie depicts the sea goddess with rounded hands, an important continuity with the myth.  The base is in the shape of a seal flipper to further the link to the creation of sea animals. 

Charles Moore tells of how the Shaman must transform to swim down and appease the sea goddess.  In this version, Moore tells that when Sedna’s head is filled with lice and her hair entangled, the currents of the sea itself are impeded. In angry response, she withholds the release of the sea mammals, the sustenance of life to the humans above.  A shaman is sent to placate Sedna by delousing and braiding her hair.

Of works of a similar subject by Manasie, Darlene Coward Wight comments, “Most often he communicates with the sea goddess, Taleelayuk (or Sedna) - part woman, part fish - who is the guardian and controller of animals.”  Wight continues, “Manasie’s works interact and, at times, explode into their environment.”  In this work, the composite figure seems to interact with the tangible environment. Sedna’s wild hair flows back as she plunges into watery isolation.

CONDITION DETAILS

For condition information please contact the specialist.

LOT 260
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About Condition Ratings

  • 5 Stars: Excellent - No discernable damage, flaws or imperfections
  • 4 Stars: Very Good - Minor flaws or imperfections visible only under close inspection using specialised instruments or black light
  • 3 Stars: Good - Minor flaws visible upon inspection under standard lighting
  • 2 Stars: Fair - Exhibits flaws or damage that may draw the eye under standard lighting
  • 1 Star: Poor - Flaws or damage immediately apparent under standard lighting (examples: missing components, rips, broken glass, damaged surfaces, etc.)

Note: Condition ratings and condition details are the subjective opinions of our specialists and should be used as a guide only. Waddington’s uses due care when preparing condition details, however, our staff are not professional restorers or conservators. Condition details and reports are not warranties and each lot is sold “as is” in accordance with the buyer’s terms and conditions of sale. In all cases the prospective purchaser is responsible for inspecting the property themselves prior to placing a bid.