Female Owl
Asking price : $4 800 plus applicable taxes
Stone cut from Cape Dorset, Baffin Island, numbered 21/50
The printmaker copies the source drawing onto a flattened stone block. He or she carefully chips away the unnecessary stone, leaving a raised surface upon which coloured inks are rolled with a brayer. Because the ink is applied to a raised surface, stonecut (like woodcut or linocut) is known as “relief” print.
Next, the printmaker lays a sheet of thin paper on the inked block and rubs the back of the paper by hand, usually using a flattened tool to apply even pressure and get better absorption. After the ink has soaked into the paper, the paper is slowly peeled from the stone block to reveal a sharp printed impression. The image appears in reverse of the original drawing.he printmaker creates not more than 50 prints from a stone block, plus five “proof” copies, before the block is ground flat. The block is used again for the next print. This technique is much like the woodcut print technique from Japan, however, the Cape Dorset studio uses stone—abundant in the Arctic—instead of wood, a softer material. - source: Canadian Museum of History:Inuit Prints exhibitions https://www.historymuseum.ca/capedorsetprints/techniques/stonecut.php
Innukjuakju Pudlat (1913 - 1972)
Female Owl, 1960
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Gallery
Cosner Art Gallery - Montreal
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Medium
Engraving
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Time
Inuit and Native art
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Dimensions
Artwork dimensions: 35,6 x 27,9 cm / 14'' x 11'' Dimensions with frame: 48,2 x 53,3 cm / 19'' x 21''
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Signed
Signed , titled , dated and numbered 21/50