Time and Tide – While either wait on no one, both have changed
In partnership with the International First Peoples’ Festival, La Guilde is proud to present Time and Tide – While either waits on no one, both have changed, an exhibition featuring the captivating work of two talented artists from Kikiak/Rigolet (NL): Eldred Allen and Jason Sikoak. This exhibition presents a duo of up-and-coming artists, longlisted for the prestigious Sobey Art Award 2024, who explore contemporary themes around transition and change in their territory.
Today’s Inuit art, through a variety of practices and media, blends tradition and contemporaneity. Lifestyles still imbued with millenia of know-how are a recurring theme in contemporary Inuit artistic endeavours, with iconography specific to northern communities. The impact of climate change, particularly felt in the North, is increasingly reflected in the work of some Inuit artists.
Eldred Allen and Jason Sikoak, both from Kikiak/Rigolet (Nunatsiavut, NL), share a distinctive approach that expresses important transitions in Inuit experience. With fundamentally different practices, these artists offer a pertinent and necessary critical look at realities of Inuit life, past and present. Reflecting on spirituality and colonial issues, Jason Sikoak uses a variety of materials -including sealskin- to address subjects rooted as much in Inuit history as in the present. Drawing on his background in documentary photography, artist Eldred Allen captures powerful moments that convey both the beauty and the complexities of the realities of his territory.
Presented in collaboration with Land InSights, Time and Tide offers a sensible look at the realities of Nunatsiavut communities. The artists guide us through a narrative that presents a rich and very present-day Inuit heritage, inviting us to reflect on the various environmental and cultural transitions that influence it.