Anirnik Ragee

"[1][3][4][5][6] Britt Galpen, writing for Inuit Art Quarterly, describes the piece as "interlocking and colliding syllabic characters rendered in a palette of vibrant yellow, orange and red, cool blue, green and purple, brown and inky black.

a pulsating image that sways and nudges across the page, creating undulating shapes that spill over the edges of its boxy form, with Ragee’s layered Inuktitut words creating a complex word puzzle, seemingly legible only in small fragments.

Taken from a distance, however, its composition invites the eye to form and reform swirling skies or layered horizons or something else altogether.

"[3] Ragee's work is held in several museums, including the National Gallery of Canada,[1] the National Portrait Gallery,[4] and the University of Michigan Museum of Art.

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