Sheokjuk Carriere
Inuit

Inukshuk

4 1/2" H x 2 1/4" W


The Inupiat people of the Arctic have been crating Inukshuk for generations - initially full size figures, used as a device to drive herds of caribou and other game into enclosed areas where they could be more easily taken during the hunt.

Today, these cultural icons are recreated as decorative art for collectors - as well as sacred talismans that bring success to a hunting party.

In the Inuit language, Inukshuk translates literally as "the shape of man."


Cape Dorset is located north of Hudson Bay on the southwest tip of Baffin Island, well above the treeline and just south of the Arctic Circle.

The Inuit inhabitants have always called the area Kinngait (pronounced king-ite), meaning "the place of hills," but it was named Cape Dorset in 1631 by the British explorer Captain Luke Foxe, who mapped the region during his unsuccessful search for the Northwest Passage; he named it in honour of the Earl of Dorset, who had sponsored the expedition.

Today, Cape Dorset is a modern community of nearly fourteen hundred inhabitants in the newly created Canadian territory of Nunavut.

Gallery Price $150.00

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