Native Art Gallery
Sedna
Sedna
Artist: John Lee Pudlat
Community: Cape Dorset
Medium: Soapstone
Dimensions (in): W7.0 x H 7.0 x D3.0
Reference: 105699
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Sedna is known as Niviaqsiaq, Talilajuq, Nuliajuk and by many other names. She is the Sea Goddess who drives the walrus and seal to the Inuit and ensures a bountiful hunt. Sedna's story is one of the most popular Inuit Legends.
The Sedna Tales tell of a willfull, strong young woman and a great storm. Long, long ago, when Sedna was a young girl she refused suitors from her own clan, instead Sedna chose a mysterious lover who turned out to be a sea bird in disguise. On hearing what had really happened, her father set out to rescue his rebellious daughter.
Finding Sedna in the nest of the Sea Bird, he spirited her away. Father and daughter began the long journey home in a skin boat. The angry and abandoned seabird made a great storm to stop them. Fearing the great power of the Sea Bird, the father decided to rid himself of his daughter. Sedna was thrown into the sea by her fearful father. Trying to save herself, she grasped the sides of the boat, pleading with her father to pull her back into the boat. The selfish father, fearing for his own life, swung his knife chopping off her fingers.
When Sedna's fingers fell into the water, the fingers became whales, seals and polar bears, her nails became whalebone. As the young woman sank into the sea she was transformed into the mystical being known as Sedna, Mother of Oceans and ruler over all life in the Sea. The blessings of Sedna are still sought by the people of the North who know it is She who sustains them.






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John Lee Pudlat

Johnny Lee was born on December 7, 1971, in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, and currently lives in Cape Dorset, Nunavut. He hails from a family of carvers; his father was the late Saila Pudlat, and his mother is Padloo Saila Pudlat. Johnny Lee is a self-taught carver who has been practicing since 1986. His work has been featured in exhibitions such as ‘Young Carvers from Cape Dorset’ at the Albers Gallery of Inuit Art in San Francisco, CA, and ‘Stone and Bone – The Inuit Master Carvers of the Canadian Arctic’ at the North West Company in the Sun Valley Centre for the Arts and Humanities, Ketchum, Idaho.