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Guide to Indian Country
- June, 2001
Celebrate National
Aboriginal Day
Clelebrations across
the country
Blending the traditional
with the contemporary
Northern artists shine
at festival
An experience to share in
Saskatchewan
Métis culture
showcased at award-winning festival
Portrait of a jingle
dress dancer
Wild West meets tranquil getaway
Tourists take to the land
Blessed waters pilgrimage
held at Beaver Lake
Largest tipi in the world
guard against loss of culture
Majestic beast making
a
comeback in Wood Buffalo
Learning traditions
through the trails
Atlantic festival shows
art from coast to coast
Quebec destinations
celebrate identity
History of the West lives on
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
Northern artists shine at festival
By Cheryl Petten
Windspeaker Staff Writer
INUVIK, N.W.T.
Artists from across the North will be gathering in Inuvik
for 10 days this summer as the community again plays host to
the Great Northern Arts Festival.
This is the thirteenth year for the festival, held this year
from July 13 to 22.
The number of artists taking part in the event has tripled since
the first festival in 1989, and the size of the venue has quintupled,
said Tanya Van Valkenburg, executive director.
However,
over the years, the festival's mandate-to foster the education
of northern artists, and to promote northern art and artists
worldwide-has remained unchanged.
In addition to meeting its mandate, the festival has an added
objective, to include the visiting public in a celebration of
northern art and culture.
One of the main elements of the festival is an art gallery, featuring
works created by artists from across the North. About 1,600 works
of art will be on display in this year's gallery, ranging from
stone, bone and ivory sculptures, to paintings, prints and photographs,
to jewelry, traditional clothing and sewing. Almost all the art
on display in the gallery will be available for purchase, so
in addition to promoting the artists, the festival also helps
translate that promotion into sales.
Those attending the festival will also have the opportunity to
learn more about the artists and their work first-hand, thanks
to the demonstration portion of the event.
"Every year we bring approximately 90 artists from across
the three northern territories, and a few guest artists from
southern Canada, and they demonstrate their techniques during
the 10 days," Van Valkenburg explained. "We have tables
set up in the centre of the gallery where they produce their
artwork, and they talk to the public, and the public can see
how they do it, and try some things out with them."
Each year carving tents are also set up outside of the festival
where carvers talk to the public while creating artwork that
is then available for sale at the festival. This feature is very
exciting for a lot of the visitors, who get an opportunity to
buy works of art they actually saw being created, Van Valkenburg
said.
Three different types of art workshops are also held during the
festival. One set of workshops is open just to participating
artists, giving them an opportunity to learn from other artists.
The other two sets of workshops are open to the public, with
one set aimed specifically at youth.
"So that's a very exciting thing, because they get to create
their own work of art while they're on site," Van Valkenburg
said.
Another feature of the festival offered specifically to the artists
is a series of business seminars, designed to provide information
about the business side of being an artist.
As in past years, entertainment also plays a big part in the
Great Northern Arts Festival.
The theme of this year's entertainment portion is Fiddling "On
the Roof", exploring the roots of fiddling in Northern Canada,
and how it has developed over the last century.
"We're
bringing in a fiddler from the Orkney Islands in Scotland, which
is where many of the Hudson Bay people came from, and they brought
fiddling. And fiddling has become a really significant part of
northern Aboriginal culture and Métis culture," Van
Valkenburg said.
The festival will feature traditional fiddle music as well as
jazz, classical, interpretive and contemporary music, with impromptu
jam sessions during the day and a more structured entertainment
schedule in the evenings.
Another highlight of this year's festival is a fashion show.
A perennial favorite festival feature among local community members,
the show introduces creations from across the North.
For more information about the Great Northern Arts Festival,
visit the festival Web site at http://www.greatart.nt.ca. For
information about accommodations in or around Inuvik during the
festival, contact Brian Desjardins, tourism co-ordinator with
the Town of Inuvik at 867-777-4321 or by e-mail at BDesjardins@town.inuvik.nt.ca.
For information about Great Northern Arts Festival tour packages,
contact Mack Travel at 877-777-2941 or by e-mail at info@macktravel.ca.
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