Inspector and Mrs.Curleigh
Playthings and Curios: Historic Inuit Art at the Canadian Museum of Civilization
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George M. Curleigh joined the RCMP in 1920 and was stationed in Pangnirtung on Baffin Island between 1926 and 1928. Later he became the commander of the detachment for the Western Arctic in Aklavik. It appears that he retired to New Brunswick. RCMP records state that he died in 1985.

In 1973, he sold the collection which he had acquired during his stay in Pangnirtung to the CMC. In his accompanying letter, he remembers the conditions under which he acquired these items. He would either obtain them by barter during the routine patrols, or Inuit from surrounding camps would bring them to the RCMP detachment in Pangnirtung.*

* CMC Archives (collectors' files)


Model Whaleboat Model Whaleboat, 1926-1928
Area around Pangnirtung, Nunavut
Ivory, cloth, string
4 x 21 x 6 cm (boat)
CMC IV-C-5180
Collected by George Curleigh while stationed at the Pangnirtung RCMP detachment between 1926 and 1928

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Curleigh identified the artist as Ataguja. Memories of the whaling era persist and are often reflected in the art from Pangnirtung even today. The exact replication of the rigging shows exquisite craftsmanship and the maker's familiarity with the original. Two of the men wear beards and moustaches, possibly to identify them as Europeans.

Exhibition History:
Aboriginal Economy. First Peoples Hall. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Zone 4, February 5, 2001 until the present.

Arctic Mirror. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec, January 25 – September 9, 1990. No catalogue.

Harpooned Bowhead Whale
Harpooned Bowhead Whale, 1926–1928
Area around Pangnirtung, Nunavut
Ivory
5.5 x 29.5 x 6 cm
CMC IV-C-5177
Collected by George Curleigh while stationed at the Pangnirtung RCMP detachment between 1926 and 1928
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Unusually large for any carving in the historic era, this whale may be part of the whaling boat, also in Curleigh's collection (IV-C-5180). Its maker had more the sensibilities of a sculptor, than of a miniaturist. The body of the massive animal is elegantly sculpted, with emphasis on its giant form rather than on fine details.

Komatik with Three Dogs
Komatik with Three Dogs, 1926–1928
Area around Pangnirtung, Nunavut
Ivory, sealskin, wood
Sled: 3 x 29 x 7 cm
Dog-a: 4 x 7 x 1.5 cm; dog-b: 3.5 x 6 x 3 cm ;
dog-c: 1.7 x 5.5 x 1.2 cm
CMC 1973-051-009
Collected by George Curleigh while stationed at the Pangnirtung RCMP detachment between 1926 and 1928
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The handsome sled shows the same assurance and skill as the whaling boat, the kayak and the harpooned whale from Curleigh's collection. There is a good chance that all are by the same maker who liked to work on a larger scale. The dogs each have a different posture and facial expression.

Model of a Kayak
Model of a Kayak, 1928–1928
Area around Pangnirtung, Nunavut
Ivory
7 x 37 x 4.5 cm
CMC IV-C-5175
Collected by George Curleigh while stationed at the Pangnirtung RCMP detachment between 1926 and 1928
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The Inuit tradition of making models preceded the arrival of strangers in the North. "Death is not considered by the Eskimo as the end of existence, but merely as a break in one's life. For this reason articles which will be useful are placed on the graves of the deceased."* A kayak such as this would certainly have been considered necessary and useful for life after death.

*E. W. Hawkes
1916 – The Labrador Eskimo. Ottawa: Government Printing Bureau, (Geological Survey of Canada) Memoir 91; Anthropological Series, No. 14, p. 136.