Northern Nightmares: Monsters in Inuit Art

Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum & Arctic Studies Center Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum & Arctic Studies Center

Exhibition: Northern Nightmares: Monsters in Inuit Art

Dates:

Location:

Arctic Museum main galleries
The landscapes and seascapes of the Arctic appear bleak and barren to those unfamiliar with the region, but Inuit know that they teem with life. Sea mammals and fish are abundant beneath the ice, and vast caribou herds graze on the tundra, willing to present themselves to respectful hunters. Inuit also know that among the animals they hunt to feed their families lurk more dangerous creatures. Monsters roam the land and swim in the icy waters, tempting the unwary into dangerous situations, stalking human prey, and even exacting revenge on behalf of malevolent humans. Come explore the world of monsters as envisioned by Inuit artists from the past and present.

Selected Works

Monsters in the Water  

In 1892 Iñupiat artists included monsters among the subjects of drawings they made for an American missionary at Siuġaq (Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska). Although pencil and paper were new to the Iñupiat, images of monsters were not.  

Palraiyuk or Tizheruk is a lizard-like creature with many sharp teeth and multiple stomachs that lurks in shallow water, ready to devour people near the water’s edge. It poses a particular danger to kayakers. In the 1800s, people painted images of a Palraiyuk on their kayaks as a way of warding off danger.  

Monsters in the Air 

Tiŋmiaqpak is a huge eagle, capable of carrying a whale in its talons. It also preys on humans and can easily capture a kayaker. Tiŋmiaqpait often live in pairs in huge nests on the tops of mountains, where they raise their families.

Monsters on the Land 

Hunters encounter various monsters on the land, from giant animals to transforming spirits. Lucassie Ikkidluak has carved a man struggling with an enormous otter that has managed to get its foot caught in a trap intended for a smaller animal. Levi Kudluarlik and Sabina Qunqnirq Anaittuq both depict hunters facing human-like creatures that have large heads and upraised arms.

Mythical Monsters  

Inuit, like people all over the world, tell stories about encounters with monsters. Some are cautionary tales, warning of dangerous places and risky behaviors. Others tell of people cleverly overcoming perilous situations. Many describe the fearsome creatures that one might encounter and how to avoid falling prey to them. 

Two-Faced Monsters 

Nancy Pukingrnak invented these “two-faced monsters” with green bodies and included them in a number of her drawings and prints. They are malevolent creatures with a vampire-like attraction to human blood. Here they threaten a woman, as her husband tries to rescue her.

Nancy Pukingrnak and Hattie Amit’naaq, Rescued from Two-faced Monsters, Baker Lake, Nunavut, 1986. Stonecut and stencil, 32/40, ink on paper. Robert and Judith Toll Collection.
Nancy Pukingrnak and Hattie Amit’naaq, Rescued from Two-faced Monsters, Baker Lake, Nunavut, 1986. Stonecut and stencil, 32/40, ink on paper. Robert and Judith Toll Collection. 

Creating a Monster 

Carvers in East Greenland began creating images of tupilaks and other mythical creatures. They soon discovered that the more grotesque a piece was, the better their Western buyers liked it. A recognizable style developed, featuring grimacing, toothy mouths and exposed skeletal elements, but individual artists still found room to express themselves.  

Ice worm tupilak carving
Unidentified Tunumiit Artist, Tupilaks, Ice Worm, Kulusuk Island, Greenland, ca. 1970. Antler. Museum Purchase. 
Unidentified Iñupiat Artist, Fabulous Eskimo Monsters, and Fabulous Eskimo Monster/four men with sledge and cooking fire/row of six birds, Siuġaq (Cape Prince of Wales), Alaska, 1892-1893. Graphite on paper. Museum purchase, Thornton Collection.
Unidentified Iñupiat Artist, Fabulous Eskimo Monsters, and Fabulous Eskimo Monster/four men with sledge and cooking fire/row of six birds, Siuġaq (Cape Prince of Wales), Alaska, 1892-1893. Graphite on paper. Museum purchase, Thornton Collection. 
Unidentified Iñupiat Artist, Fabulous Roc and Whale, Siuġaq (Cape Prince of Wales), Alaska, 1892-1893. Graphite on paper. Museum purchase, Thornton Collection.
Unidentified Iñupiat Artist, Fabulous Roc and Whale, Siuġaq (Cape Prince of Wales), Alaska, 1892-1893. Graphite on paper. Museum purchase, Thornton Collection. 
Lucassie Ikkidluak, Otter and Man, Inukjuak, Nunavik, 1965. Soapstone. Museum purchase.
Lucassie Ikkidluak, Otter and Man, Inukjuak, Nunavik, 1965. Soapstone. Museum purchase. 
Unidentified Tunumiit Artist, Tupilaks, Tusked/Tongued Creature, and Skeletal Walrus, Kulusuk Island, Greenland, ca. 1970. Sperm whale tooth. Museum Purchase.
Unidentified Tunumiit Artist, Tupilaks, Tusked/Tongued Creature, and Skeletal Walrus, Kulusuk Island, Greenland, ca. 1970. Sperm whale tooth. Museum Purchase.