Record Details
Book cover

Annie Pootoogook : cutting ice = Ini Putugu : tukisitittisimavuq takusinnggittunik

Campbell, Nancy, 1965- (Author). Campbell, Nancy, 1965- Annie Pootoogook. (Added Author). Campbell, Nancy, 1965- Annie Pootoogook. Inuktitut. (Added Author). McMichael Canadian Art Collection. (Added Author).

The life and death of Annie Pootoogook (1969-2016) became a national story when her body was recovered from the Rideau River in Ottawa in September 2016. The complexities of her short 47 years speak to both possibility and heartbreak, issues of truth and reconciliation, the richness of community, and the depths of tragedy. Her arresting pencil crayon drawings recording the details of her life have had a significant impact on both the contemporary art of her Inuit community and Canada at large. Her drawings and her legacy, depict a community in transition; one that respects its past and is negotiating its future.

Book  - 2017
741.092 Cam
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available

Browse Related Items

  • ISBN: 9781773100692
  • Physical Description 173 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2017.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Inuktitut parallel title romanized.
NFPL Indigenous Collection.
Published in conjunction with the exhibition Annie Pootoogook : cutting ice organized by the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, September 2, 2017-February 11, 2018.
Language Note:
Text in English with Inuktitut translation.
Issuing Body Note:
Co-published by: McMichael Canadian Art Collection.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 9781773100692
Annie Pootoogook : Cutting Ice
Annie Pootoogook : Cutting Ice
by Campbell, Nancy
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Summary

Annie Pootoogook : Cutting Ice


When Annie Pootoogook won the Sobey Art Award in 2006, she cracked the glass ceiling for Inuit art, securing its place in contemporary Canadian art discourse and establishing herself as an artist of international importance. Her achievement sparked critical discussion around contemporary art as well as the absence, and growing presence, of Inuit art: an important conversation that continues to this day. The life and death of Annie Pootoogook is a story of national significance. The complex narratives weaving through her short life speak to possibility and heartbreak, truth and reconciliation, the richness of community, and the depths of tragedy. These complexities are recorded in her arresting pencil crayon compositions. Her frank, sometimes challenging, sometimes amusing images of everyday life, acutely observed and marked by a linear control as taut as a wire, declare her as a major contributor to the landscape of contemporary Inuit art. Annie Pootoogook: Cutting Ice accompanied an exhibition organized by the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, the gallery of record for works on paper from Annie Pootoogook's Inuit community of Kinngait (Cape Dorset). Under the direction of Nancy Campbell, this publication and the exhibition serve to commemorate the life and work of a remarkable artist after her tragically early death.