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John
Awa, originally from Pond Inlet, Nunavut, has been carving
since he was a teenager. (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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Some Inuit artists in Montreal have carved out a space of their
very own at a homeless shelter that aims to help them get a fair
price for their work.
John Awa, who is originally from Pond Inlet, Nunavut, is one
of several Inuit carvers who spends most days carving at Open Door
homeless shelter. Awa has been carving since he was a teenager.
His work includes Inukshuks, owls, whales, and dancing bears.
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Carver
John Awa at work at Open Door. (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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Awa's carvings have shown in many galleries, but he struggles
to get paid fairly for his work.
"A gallery will buy a carving for $50 and sell it for like $400,"
said Awa. "They do that all the time. And we always only make a
little bit."
Open Door's clients are largely Indigenous and almost half are
Inuit. The shelter provides carvers with soapstone, tools and a
space in which to work. When the shelter launched the carving program
last year, one of its goals was to give these artists the opportunity
to get paid more.
Acting director David Chapman is familiar with carvers not getting
compensated fairly by galleries. It's something he's heard from
a number of clients.
"One issue that we learned from the carvers was that often galleries
would give them a relatively small percentage of what the work would
sell for," said Chapman. "The carvers said they often felt ripped
off when they took their work to galleries."
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John
Awa's beluga whale carving, in progress. (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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Chapman said people know they can buy carvings directly from
artists at Open Door. Staff at the shelter are available to help
the carvers get compensated fairly for their carvings, without taking
a percentage of the sale price.
"We encourage the carvers not to just give their works away
for the lowest price but to actually try and claim a decent price
for their work," said Chapman. "The initiative is really about empowering
the carvers, not holding their hand."
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John
Awas carvings have shown in many galleries, but he struggles
to get paid fairly for his work. 'We always only make a little
bit.' (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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'Every month we run out of soapstone'
The program has been so successful the shelter has trouble keeping
up with soapstone supply. In order to ensure that carvers have stone
to carve, the shelter sometimes takes to its Facebook page to ask
for donations.
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Carver
Simiuni Nauya at Open Door in Montreal. (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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"We go through a lot of soapstone and it is an ongoing challenge,"
said Chapman. "Every month we run out of soapstone."
'We just work with what they've got'
"We don't have the funds to get a shop, so we just work with
what they got and carve outside."
At Open Door, artists carve outside because working with soapstone
can generate a lot of dust.
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Simiuni
Nauya inuksuk carving, in progress. (Zoe Tennant/CBC)
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Awa hopes to one day have his own studio to carve in.
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Inuit
carvers John Awa and Simiuni Nauya at work at Open Door. (Zoe
Tennant/CBC)
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