The Rockwell Museum of Western Art will present, as the last of  four special exhibitions this year, “Cultural Reflections: Inuit  Art from the Collection of the Dennos Museum Center,” November  4-May 29.   This exhibition will give viewers the opportunity to view the  evolution of the dynamic Inuit culture still in process and to  experience the native culture of the icy Canadian Artic through  collections of contemporary sculpture, prints and drawings by  Inuit artists. The collection is a reflection of life on the  land; a record of daily events and serves as a visual narrative  for keeping alive the old ways; the old life of skin tents and  snow houses, the nomadic life when seasonal hunting dictated  lifestyle and, in essence, survival.   The Dennos collection boasts one of the largest and most  historically complete public collections of Inuit contemporary  art by the Inuit artists of the Canadian Arctic to be found in  the United States. This major collection is permanently showcased  at Northwestern Michigan College in Traverse City, Mich.   The works in “Cultural Reflections” present a survey of Inuit  stone cut, stencil and lithograph prints, and sculptures from the  late 1950s to the present. Selected from more than 1,000 objects  in the museum’s permanent collection, the exhibition features  artists from numerous communities within Nunavut, the new  Canadian territory. As a whole, the exhibition is intended to  reveal the vision and scope of contemporary Inuit art, not only  through first generation masters such as Parr, Pudlo Pudlat,  Kenojuak Ashevak, and Kananginak, to name a few, but “second  generation” artists as well.   Worldwide awareness of Inuit art originated with the assistance  of James Houston, noted artist, author and designer for Steuben  Glass, who collected small carvings made by Canada’s aboriginal  (Inuit) peoples in the late 1940s. He brought the sculptures to  southern Canada where they were subsequently sold to support the  economic needs of the Inuit people. In 1953 James Houston solicited support from his friend,Eugene Power, who was born in Traverse City, to help import Inuitart into the United States. Power, who owned and operatedUniversity Microfilms in Ann Arbor, Mich., established a nonprofitgallery called Eskimo Art Incorporated to import the work. Heencouraged the Cranbrook Institute of Science to host the firstexhibition of Inuit art in the United States in 1953.   In 1960 Wilbur Munnecke of Field Enterprises in Chicago, who was  on the board of Eskimo Inc, gave Northwestern Michigan College  (NMC) in Traverse City a small collection of sculpture and prints  to sell and Bernie Rink, director of the library, used proceeds  from the sale to purchase some of the work. Thus began the  collection of Inuit art.   The exhibition will open with a reception at 5:30 pm on  November 3 at the Rockwell Museum of Western Art, which is on the  corner of Denison Parkway and Cedar Street. The reception is open  to the public’ reservations can be made by calling 607-974-2333.  Visit rockwellmuseum.org for more information.          
 
    



 
						