At Fort Chimo, 1896
Playthings and Curios: Historic Inuit Art at the Canadian Museum of Civilization
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Paul Bonard

Paul Bonard originally came from La Rochelle in France. He was hired by the trading company, Revillon Frères, to go to Northern Quebec to establish new trading posts there. In 1903, their vessel, the Eldorado, was shipwrecked and Bonard and 51 other passengers had to make their way back to civilization in two lifeboats and a sailboat.* After a harrowing journey, they arrived in Montreal.**

According to his son, Bonard spent from 1904 until 1910 in Northern Quebec. Judging by the style of the ivories, he spent some of that time at the trading post in Fort Chimo. On his return to Montreal, Bonard married, and subsequently died fighting in the First World War.

*L.F.S. Upton
1968 – "The Wreck of the Eldorado." Beaver Magazine, Autumn 1968,
pp. 27-31.

**Globe and Mail
"Strange Tale of Shipwreck." October 24, 1903, p. 9.


Amulet
Arctic Life, 1904–1905
Ungava region, Nunavik
Ivory, black colouring
6.5 x 30.5 x 4 cm
CMC IV-B-1780
This work was acquired with the assistance of the Government of Canada under the terms of the Cultural Property Export and Import Act. Collected by Revillon Frères trader Paul Bonard
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Anthropologist Frank Speck offers the hypothesis that these carved walrus tusks grew out of a tradition of carvers completing all animals on a tusk, and then breaking them up into individual figures. He speculates that one buyer stopped the carver from breaking up the tusk and thus a new tradition was born.*

*Speck, Frank
1927 – "Eskimo Carved Ivories from Northern Labrador." Indian Notes,
vol.4, # 4, p. 311.

Amulet
Arctic Animals, 1904–1910
Ungava region, Nunavik
Ivory, black colouring
6.5 x 30 x 3.2 cm
CMC IV-B-1775
Gift of André Bonard, Montreal, 1983
Collected by Revillon Frères trader Paul Bonard
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The collection of the major Arctic animals can be broken up into three scenes: there is a bear on its haunches facing two seals; there are three walrus, with two lying on the shore, while the head of the third is shown emerging from the water; and there is another bear facing a seal. The two scenes involving bears and seals can be interpreted as hunting scenes. The polar bear relies on the seal as a major source of food, as does the traditional Inuit hunter.

Scene of Traditional Life
Scene of Traditional Life, 1904–1905
Ungava region, Nunavik
Ivory, black colouring
4.5 x 37.5 x 5.5 cm
CMC IV-B-1781
This work was acquired with the assistance of the Government of Canada under the terms of the Cultural Property Export and Import Act. Collected by Revillon Frères trader Paul Bonard
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This extraordinary sculpture represents a brilliant adaptation of the natural shape of the walrus tusk as carving material. Within the intricate overall composition, several little scenes are hidden that depict traditional Inuit life. There is the hunter in the kayak, going after the seals resting on an ice floe. Another hunter is aiming his rifle at a bear. After turning the piece around, one discovers another scene in winter, with a dogsled pulled by a team of dogs.

Exhibition History:
In the Shadow of the Sun: Perspectives on Contemporary Native Art. Museum am Ostwall fuer Kunst und Kulturgeschichte, Dortmund, Germany, December 9, 1988 – February 27, 1989; Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec, June 29, 1989 – January 2, 1990; Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia, April 20 – June 24, 1990; Rijksmuseum Voor Volkenkunde, Leiden, Netherlands, August 30 – October 18, 1991. Exhibition catalogues in German and English.

References:
Canadian Museum of Civilization
1988 – Treasures. Hull, Quebec: Canadian Museum of Civilization and Scarborough: Old Bridge Press, ill. pp. 102-103.

Hoffman, Gerhard (ed.)
1988 – Im Schatten der Sonne: Zeitgenoessische Kunst der Indianer und Eskimos in Kanada. Exhibition catalogue. Stuttgart: Edition Cantz, no. 121, p. 443.

Grazing Caribou
Grazing Caribou, 1904–1910
Ungava region, Nunavik
Ivory, black colouring
3 x 17 x 1.5 cm
CMC IV-B-1774
Gift of André Bonard, Montreal, 1983.
Collected by Revillon Frères trader Paul Bonard
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The scene of an adult caribou grazing with its young clearly has one viewpoint, unlike the other pieces from Bonard's collection. The three animals share the same environment and are connected to each other. This piece is reminiscent of drawings collected by explorers during the early part of the twentieth century.