The Arctic on Screen – What to Watch Part III: Inuit Women on Both Sides of the Camera
In the 1990s, Quebecois filmmaker Marie-Hélène Cousineau first offered a workshop in video production to women in Igloolik. Out of that initial workshop grew the Women’s Video Workshop of Igloolik, later renamed (AVP). Their goal was, and is, to tell Inuit women’s stories. Arnait (which means women in Inuktitut) welcomed all who were interested, and key participants included Mary Kunuk, Madeline Ivalu, Susan Avingaq and Atuat Akkitirq. In a with Laura McGough for INCITE Journal of Experimental Media, Cousineau describes the origins of AVP and the long and incredibly productive relationship she developed with the women of Igloolik, but most particularly with Ivalu and Avingaq. Over time the workshop transformed from a loose collective producing innovative short films to a non-profit and ultimately a for-profit production company, giving them increased access to funding for more ambitious, feature-length productions.
Eventually, following the model of Isuma (and often working with them), Arnait began producing feature films as well. Their first, (2009, 1 hour 33 minutes, Inuktitut with English subtitles) was directed by Cousineau and Ivalu, who also starred in it as an elder stranded on the land with her grandson in the mid-1800s. In Canada it is available for rent or purchase though iTunes. More recent films, such as (2013, 1 hour 27 minutes, English and Inuktitut with English subtitles, on iTunes in Canada) which follows a Montreal woman visiting the family of his Inuit father for the first time, increasingly explore contemporary issues facing northern communities.
Ivalu, Cousineau, and Avingaq continue to be deeply involved in Arnait productions, as actors, writers, designers, and producers, working with a range of others and addressing contemporary issues with their unique perspective. (2019, 1 hour 38 minute, Inuktitut with English subtitles, available for purchase on VIMEO) follows a young Inuk woman as she lives as a single mother in the rapidly changing years following the Second World War. (2018, not available for streaming) was co-written directed by Lucy Tulugarjuk, who has been working in film and television since 1997, both as an actor (most famously Puju in ) and in production.
The women of Arnait are not alone, however. stands out. Her path to filmmaking was different, beginning as a producer before moving into writing and directing. She is perhaps most widely known for her award winning 2016 film (1 hour 22 minutes, available to purchase or through Amazon Prime video), a moving and thought-provoking documentary focusing on the Inuit struggle against the European ban on sealskin. She has other films well worth watching as well, including (50 minutes, Inuktitut with English subtitles, available for purchase ), and the animated short , a retelling of the Inuit legend “the blind boy and the loon.”
These links are only a taste of the many terrific films made by Inuit women. We can expect many more to come.