Saimaiyu Akesuk at Open Studio

Saimaiyu Akesuk, Qaumajaq (Fly), 2014
stonecut and stencil on paper 37.3"x24.4"
Saimaiyu Akesuk: Prints 2013-2015 

Curated by Dr. Nancy Campbell

16 June to 15 July 2017
Opening Reception: Friday 16 June from 6:30 to 8:30pm

Open Studio 
Toronto, Canada

Information: 416-504-8238 or [email protected]
The Cape Dorset Annual Print Collection produced at Kinngait Studios, part of the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative in Kinngait, Nunavut, has annually catalogued collections of between 30 and 60 images as well as numerous commissions and special releases every year since 1959 providing a valuable record of the changes in the community. Pulling from this archive, Open Studio will present an exhibition curated by Dr. Nancy Campbell, highlighting prints by artist Saimaiyu Akesuk. The exhibition brochure is available for download.

Kinngait Studios is the  longest continuously running print studio in Canada. Despite these impressive origins and prolific print output, studio production is constantly changing to allow artists to create and sell art to new audiences and appeal to a changing audience. Saimaiyu Akesuk, born in 1988, is a recent artist member at the Kinngait Cooperative. Her bold, colourful prints featuring birds and animals recall the archetypal work of her Elders that feature a singular graphic image, such as Kenojuak Ashevak (1927-2013), Papiara Tukiki (1942-) and Sheojuk Etidlooie (1929-1999) but remain uniquely her own. Her acid colour palette and large scale mark a move from her origins and sit comfortably with both Inuit and contemporary art audiences. Her prints have recently been exhibited in Toronto, Brooklyn, and Portland.

" When I went down to the litho shop to sell my first drawing, I was very nervous wondering whether they would buy it or not. My first drawing was an image of my late grandfather's (Latchaolassie) carving of a bird. I was so proud to get paid for that drawing and it inspired me to do more drawings." - Saimaiyu Akesuk

Saimaiyu Akesuk was born on April 28, 1988 in Iqaluit but she has lived in Cape Dorset her whole life. Her parents are Lau Akesuk and Olayuk Akesuk who was one of the first Members of the Legislative Assembly in Nunavut. Saimaiyu was inspired to start drawing by Ningiukulu Teevee while they were taking a class together at the Nunavut Teaching Education Program. Saimaiyu's confident drawings of birds and bears are characterized by her bold and dynamic simplicity rendered with soft tenderness and quite often a touch of whimsy.

Dr. Nancy Campbell has been a contemporary art curator for the past twenty years. She has held positions at the Art Gallery of Ontario, the University of Guelph, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection and The Power Plant. In 2006 she curated an exhibition for The Power Plant on the work of Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook that travelled nationally and internationally, propelling Pootoogook to be included in Documenta 12 and win the Sobey Art Prize in 2007. Since that time, Nancy has focused her curatorial practice on the contemporary Inuit, producing many exhibitions attempting to bridge the Inuit with the contemporary art.
Open Studio  is a charitable, non-profit, artist-run centre. It is Canada's leading printmaking centre, dedicated to the production, preservation and promotion of contemporary original fine art prints. Open Studio provides multi-faceted services, programs and information to artists and the public alike. As a national organization, Open Studio offers affordable and equal access to printmaking facilities, programs and services for artists from across Canada and abroad. Programs at Open Studio are accessible to the arts community and the general public.  openstudio.on.ca
Since 1959, the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative has enjoyed an international reputation for the exquisite prints, drawings and carvings created by its Inuit artist-members. In addition to operating the Kinngait Studios in Cape Dorset, the Cooperative maintains a Toronto office, Dorset Fine Arts, which is responsible for interfacing with galleries, museums, cultural professionals, Inuit art enthusiasts and the art market globally. Established in 1978 as the marketing division of the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative, the role of Dorset Fine Arts has significantly expanded to include communications, promotion, advocacy, government relations and special projects as related to the Inuit art of Cape Dorset.  dorsetfinearts.com