Winnipeg Art Gallery sets up shop, promotes Inuit art at The Forks - Action News
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Winnipeg Art Gallery sets up shop, promotes Inuit art at The Forks

A new retail space to promote and sell Inuit art is opening at The Forks, as part of a partnership between the Winnipeg Art Gallery and the Government of Nunavut.
The idea for WAG@The Forks grew out of consultations around the planned Inuit Art Centre and the role the WAG plays in promoting Inuit art and economic development, a news release from the WAG says. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

A new retail space to promote and sell Inuit art is opening at The Forks, as part of a partnership between the Winnipeg Art Gallery andthe Government ofNunavut.

The space was unveiled to media on Wednesday and will open to thepublic onJune 25in the Johnston Terminal.

WAG@The Forks will also feature the type of handmade goods found at the downtown WAG Gallery Shop: jewelry, contemporary Canadian crafts,First Nations and Mtis artand more.

"By extending the WAG brand to one of Manitoba's most popular attractions, WAG@The Forks will build new audiences for Inuit art and drive tourism to the North," said Stephen Borys, WAG director and CEO.

WAG@The Forks will provide another venue for northern artists to sell their amazing works, said Nunavut Minister of Economic Development and Transportation Monica Ell-Kanayuk. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The plan is forWAG@The Forksto be in place for the nextthree years.

"This retail galleryprovides another venue for our talented artists to sell their amazing works,"saidNunavutMinister of Economic Development and Transportation MonicaEll-Kanayuk.

"This further encouragesNunavutartists to produce high-quality work and market their art across Canada, which allows for greater engagement with Inuit art and culture."

The idea grew out of consultations aroundthe planned Inuit Art Centre and the role the WAG plays in promoting Inuit art and economic development, a news release from the WAG says.

The WAG holds in trust the world's largest public collection of contemporary Inuit art. With more than 13,000 pieces, the collection represents half of the gallery's total permanent art collection.

The $60-millionInuit Art Centrewill house and display those artifacts as well as offer programming and initiatives to bridge the divide between northern communities and cities in the south.

Inuit art to be displayed at the Forks

8 years ago
Duration 0:47
Nunavut MLA Monica Ell-Kanayuk speaks about opportunity for Inuit artists

The four-level, 40,000-square-foot Inuit Art Centre building will be directly adjacent to the existing downtown WAG building. In addition to Inuit and Indigenous galleries, it will feature a vault in the entrance, space for artist and curator residencies and five studios offering year-round programming.

Officials hope to start construction at the end of 2016 or the beginning of 2017, with an expected construction timeline of two years.