Museum of Contemporary Circumpolar Art (MCCA)
ObjectManhole Hunter / Manhole Hunter (Sculpture )
“I had grown up idolising my grandfather Marc Tungilik who spent his life as a carver. His art mirrored his life and experiences depicting traditional themes and subjects. My life and experiences were quite a bit different than his, and I wanted my art to reflect that.
The idea for manhole hunter was partially inspired by a poem by Mosha Folger where he describes homeless Inuit living in southern Canadian cities as floating away on slabs of concrete ice. The combining of traditional and contemporary materials and the juxtaposition of traditional and contemporary subject matter reflects my experience as a mixed heritage Inuk with one foot in the past and one in the present.” Jesse Tungilik
2012
Copyright for non-commercial use of images from artist with the invoice
Accession
2015.02
Object Type
Sculpture
Title
Manhole Hunter
Description
Manhole Hunter
Production Year
2012
Production Location
ᐃᖃᓗᐃᑦ, ᓄᓇᕗᑦ, ᑲᓇᑕ
Materials
Asphalt, metal, antler
Dimensions
H7.5 x W19 x D25cm
Provenance
from artist in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut
Artist
Exhibitions
- Linked: When Contemporary Art Creates Awareness About Climate Change (Musee oceanographique, Monaco), 2015
- Linked: When Contemporary Art Creates Awareness About Climate Change (Black Box/ White Space, Neuchatel, Switzerland), 2016
- When contemporary art creates awareness about climate change (Vigdis International Centre for Multiingualism and Intercultural Understanding, Reykjavk, Iceland), 2018
- When comtemporary art creates awareness about climate change (Arctic Circle Assembly, Harpa, Reykjavik, Iceland), 2018
- Permanent Exhibition (Museum Cerny Inuit Collection, Bern, Switzerland), 2018
- Voices from the Arctic / Röster från Arktis (Världskulturmuseet, Gothenburg, Sweden), 2019
- ᓂᐲᑦ ᐅᑭᐅᖅᑕᖅᑐᒥᙵᖅᑐᑦ. Stimmen aus der Arktis (Museum Cerny), 2020
- Qanga (Musée cantonal d'archaeologie et histoire, Lausanne), 2022
- Sedna: Mythos und Wandel in der Arktis (NONAM), 2023