crafted Show + Sale 2022

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Nov 4-6 Fri 11am–9pm + Sat + Sun 11am–5pm Winnipeg Art Gallery–Qaumajuq • 300 Memorial Blvd #WAGCRAFTED wag.ca/crafted Beaded earrings by Shiny Raven Club
ii W E D . - S A T . | 1 2 - 4 P M 1 3 2 9 C U M B E R L A N D A V E . W I N N I P E G , M B G A L L E R Y M U S E U M S H O P W O R K S H O P S L I B R A R Y c 2 c e n t r e f o r c r a f t . c a
KAREN SCHMIDT HUMISKI
LIN XU DEBRA FRANCES PLETT Dedicated to presenting the best of contemporary and traditional craft in Manitoba

GREETINGS

FROM THE MANITOBA CRAFT COUNCIL

For many craftspeople and lovers of fine craft in this province, CRAFTED is the highlight of our year. Exquisite handmade items, a beautiful, art-filled space, knowledgeable makers, discerning visitors, and welcoming volunteers and staff – it’s magical! After a period of so much isolation and uncertainty, it makes you want to wash your hair, exchange your sweatpants for something a little dressier, call a friend, and get down here!

We are thrilled to return to the WAG this year for CRAFTED 2022 - our eighth season. While the overall feel of the event has remained consistent over the years, every iteration presents new possibilities. CRAFTED 2022 features over one hundred artists from across Manitoba, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut – our biggest sale yet! Last year you embraced an expanded three-day sale format that enabled social distancing and timed entry. While public health guidelines have since eased, having enjoyed the more relaxing pace of a longer event, we opted to make it permanent.

Philanthropy has always been part of CRAFTED’s zeitgeist. Over the years, we’ve invited the community to make mittens, scarves, and quilts, invest in cookbooks highlighting local ceramic artists and chefs, purchase beading kits and gather to share stories and skills – all in support of people and causes that are dear to us. This year, we’re excited to roll out the runway and introduce our first fashion show. Works of wearable art by over 20 artists, exhibited in their “natural habitat” - the human body! - will launch CRAFTED 2022. A portion of the proceeds is being directed towards the Tunngasugit Inuit Resource Centre.

Many thanks to WAG staff and volunteers for your ongoing love and support for craft and craftspeople: Sherri Van Went, WAG’s Retail Operations Manager; all WAG staffers whose behind the scenes work in fundraising, communications, admin, event planning, security, and caretaking bring CRAFTED to life; our partners at Northwest Territories Arts and Nunavut Development Corporation; MCC Programme and Outreach Coordinator, Katrina Craig, and supporting MCC staff; and to all participating artists who are the very heart of CRAFTED.

manitobacraft.ca

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GREETINGS FROM NUNAVUT DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

Nunavut Development Corporation (NDC) is honored to be partnering with the Winnipeg Art Gallery (WAG), the Manitoba Craft Council (MCC), and NWT Arts to showcase northern craft artists and their work at CRAFTED 2022.

Nunavut’s sprawling landscape rooted by the lush tundra and draped with wind swept sheets of snow is the inspiration to so many artists living on its land. It is no wonder that Nunavut’s population is made up of 10% artists, the highest in Canada.

Craft is at the core of Inuit culture and history, from the fine threads of a muskox hide woven into wool, or the tusk of a walrus carved into figurines for traditional games.

Over time, craft has evolved as new mediums have been introduced such as delicate clay sculptures or precious metal work.

One thing is for certain: Inuit craft artists across Nunavut will continue to share their stories through their craft for years to come, but, like the ever-changing snow drifts, Nunavut artists will surprise you with their innovative techniques!

NDC understands the importance of investing in cultural industry sectors. Through our regional subsidiaries, we are able to support artists in skill development and professional development opportunities and access to materials needed to create their craft. The fine craft market within Nunavut has grown in the past few years and we are excited to share with you some of the best!

2 GREETINGS

PRINT COLLECTION

Since the founding in 1959 of its celebrated Kinngait Studios, the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative has presented this annual release of fine art prints. This collection is a snapshot of today’s most significant Inuit creative expression, and WAG-Qaumajuq is proud to partner with Dorset Fine Arts as an official dealer.

63RD CAPE DORSET ANNUAL
GALLERY SHOP 300 Memorial Blvd .ca. Ningeokulu Teevvee. #yourstory
NUNAVUT KIVALLIQ NUNAVUT KITIKMEOTNORTHWEST TERRITORIES Tuktuuyaqtuuq Tuktoyaktuk Inuvik
Kangiqtiniq Rankin Inlet Winnipeg Ikpiarkuk Arctic Bay Arviat Fort Smith Fort Simpson Hay River Yellowknife Norman Wells
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NUNAVUT QIKIQTAALUK

CRAFTED welcomes 12 artists from 7 communities in the Northwest Territories, 10 artists from 6 communities in Nunavut, and 1 artist from Nunatsiavut. We hope you enjoy meeting them!

NUNAVIK

NUNATSIAVUT

Labrador City

Naujaat Kinngait Kikiak Rigolet Iqaluit
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EACH PIECE OF ART TELLS A STORY

NWT Arts connects you with that story

In stores and galleries, the NWT Arts logo identifies authentic Northwest Territories arts and fine crafts created by artists registered with the NWT Arts Program. Artists create one-of-a-kind handmade pieces that capture their northern spirit and share their unique stories of living in Canada’s Northwest Territories.

Connect with artists and learn Where to Buy NWT Art at nwtarts .com

Artists Left to Right: Delia Cepoi, Yellowknife | Rory Voudrach, Inuvik

GREETINGS

FROM THE NWT ARTS PROGRAM

For a second year, NWT Arts is honoured to partner with the WAG-Qaumajuq and the MCC for CRAFTED 2022. Without their commitment to collaboration and passion to showcase northern artists, our participation would not be possible. We are also very excited to showcase alongside neighbouring artists from Nunavut this year!

The Northwest Territories (NWT) is composed of 33 communities spread over more than one million square kilometres. There are 11 official languages and three distinct Indigenous groups across the territory: Dene, Inuit and Métis. With little else than what could be found in nature, people were able to survive and flourish in the harsh Arctic landscape. This spirit can be seen today in residents who still live a subsistence way of life including hunting, fishing, trapping and gathering from the land.

It is from these subsistence activities, that natural materials are acquired and artwork is created. Yet, many do not consider themselves “artists”. They may have learned to sew for survival or necessity. They might carve to express the potential of a raw material from the land, or to ensure the whole animal is used. From these strong roots, skills and techniques are nurtured to create sought-after pieces of work and substantiate their place in the fine craft market. The value of sourcing and preparing materials from the land is resurging amongst northern craft artists who want to ensure these important cultural skills and techniques are not lost for future generations.

Craft is a celebration of community stories. The stories of tradition and culture that belong to the northern Indigenous peoples, as well as the stories of the settlers who moved there and carried their home traditions with them in the form of their crafts. Today, traditional craft techniques adapt and blend with innovation to follow a unique contemporary path.

NWT Arts is a marketing and promotion program, run by the Government of the Northwest Territories, which helps NWT artists share their work and tell their stories. This support fosters economic benefit and encourages artists of all genres to continue practicing a creative and cultural way of life.

I hope you spend some time with the 12 NWT craft artists on the 3rd Floor Skylight Gallery, and beyond the walls of CRAFTED 2022, you are encouraged to discover more about the NWT and all the spectacular things it has to offer.

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nwtarts.com

CRAFTED 2022 SPECIAL THANKS

CRAFTED: A Fashion Show and CRAFTED: Show + Sale Committee Members

Meghan Kinita Greenlay, Cynthia Gyles, Sarah Sue MacLachlan, Michelle Maynard, Heather Shayna, Margaret-Ann Smith, Dorothy Taylor

WAG Staff

Katryna Barske, Skye Callow, Amy Rebecca Harrison, Alyssa Homeniuk, Julia Lafreniere, Colleen Leduc, Cara Mason, Jocelyn Piirainen, Tanya Reid, Doren Roberts, Rebecca Szymkow, Sherri Van Went, Hanna Waswa

Doowah Design Inc

Partner Organization Staff

Kayla Cooper (NWT Arts), Katrina Craig (MCC), Goretti Kakuktinniq (NDC), Tammy Sutherland (MCC), Johanna Tiemessen (NWT Arts), Theresie Tungilik (GN)

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from WAG-Qaumajuq

We are thrilled to welcome you all to WAG-Qaumajuq for this celebrated annual shopping experience. CRAFTED 2022 is our biggest ever, with over 100 artists taking over all four levels of the Gallery. This year, we are pleased to present CRAFTED: A Fashion Show, a special kick-off celebration featuring over 20 designers from Manitoba, Nunavut, and the Northwest Territories. After the show, you can shop many of the looks as part of the CRAFTED: Show + Sale.

Your admission to CRAFTED: Show + Sale gives you full access to visit the galleries and I encourage you to take in the art on display. Visit Robert Houle: Red is Beautiful on the Gallery’s third level, a massive retrospective of the art of one of Canada’s most celebrated artists. On that same floor, explore Canadian and European works spanning five centuries in our two permanent collection galleries. In Qaumajuq, take in the Visible Vault on our main level, and visit INUA before the inaugural show closes in the new year.

CRAFTED would not be possible without our many partners and we cannot thank you enough. A special thanks to Tammy Sutherland and Katrina Craig of the Manitoba Craft Council for your continued partnership. Thanks to Goretti Kakuktinniq from Nunavut Development Corporation and Theresie Tungilik from the Government of Nunavut and WAG-Qaumajuq Board. Thank you to Johanna Tiemessen and Kayla Cooper from Northwest Territories Arts. Thank you to our amazing staff and volunteers, the fashion show committee, Swish Model Management, our community models, MC College, and John Graham. And finally, thank you to all the artists for sharing your work with us!

Each year, we give back to the community with a philanthropic element as part of the CRAFTED: Show + Sale. All proceeds from CRAFTED: A Fashion Show will go towards Tunngasugit Inuit Resource Centre, a non-profit organization that exists to help Inuit living in Urban centres.

Thank you for joining us at CRAFTED 2022; by being here, you’re helping to support the arts in Winnipeg and beyond.

WAG-Qaumajuq Director & CEO wag.ca

9 GREETINGS
Visible Vault Gallery Shop Katita Café ILIPVIKLearning Steps NUTAAQ TUMMAQTUYUQ Outdoor Plaza ILAVUT Entrance Hall Eckhardt Hall MRAGallery frontdesk Memorial Boulevard AvenueMarySt. Paashchipew Way(Colony Street) Entrance & Exit Entrances are temporarily closed Public LockersSecurity Lecture Room OHNI IZANZAN HallwayStairs Stairs 10 1. MAIN LEVEL: 1ST FLOOR LEVEL 1 / ECKHARDT HALL ARTISTS Ashoona Studios Caneu Cathie Ugrin Fabric Artist CJ Tennant Jewellery Cloverdale Forge Cypress Ceramic Studio Debra Frances Earth and Hide Fat Daug Herman de Vries Jonasie Faber Kami Goertz Kataisee Attagutsiak Kelli Rey Studio Mathew Nuqingaq Paul Malliki Shiny Raven Club Wilder Goods Crafted Check in
Mezzanine Gallery Visible VaultILIPVIKLearning Steps
Clara Lander Library
NIIZHWAASO Collaborative Research Centre CarvingPorch Stairs 11 2. MEZZANINE LEVEL: 2ND FLOOR LEVEL 2 / MEZZANINE ARTISTS bead n butter Brook Drabot Glass Charlie's Charmed Crystal Nykoluk Earthshaper dconstruct Happyland Print Shop Helen Gair Millinery i-co globes Johanna Brierley Jewellery Design Karen Schmidt Humiski Studio Katharina Nuss Margaret Jane Design Meg Does Pottery Nimis Design Salvaged Earth Designs SOL Designs Teegan Walker Ceramics The Strange Geranium

Alina Tungilik

Gordon

Erin Konsmo Hailey A White Junebug

Johnston Daria Tittenberger Lii Belwe Beads Magpie Chiq McMillan Pottery Metalissima

KAJA Design Lavinia van Heuvelen Metro Grade

Kathryne Koop Red Earth Ceramic Jewelry Rosemarie Peloquin

Hildebrand

Aliza Amihude

Ornaments Anastasia Pindera

Sigurdson

No

michinos Neyats'e Beads Oak Hammock

Julianna Zwierciadlowska- Rhymer Mawdsley

Rachael Kroeker Ceramics

OCTAV Tinta by Masagana Flower

Tricia Wasney Jewellery Twin

Stoneworks Windhorse Pottery Winnipeg North Of Fargo

Bambi’s

Fennell

Debz

Do

Sahtu Golden Willow Co. K'estuwé

Ruben Onte Sews

Taalrumiq

QILAK Main Inuit Gallery PIMÂTISIWIN Focus Gallery Skylight Gallery Gallery 9 Gallery 8 Gallery 7 Gallery 6 Gallery 3 Gallery 1 Gallery 2 Gallery 5 Gallery4 Nakishkamohk Stairs 12 INUA European and Canadian Art, 1500-1900 William Kurelek: The Presence of Melancholy European and Contemporary Art, 1900-1950 Robert Houle: Red is Beautiful LEVEL 3 / SKYLIGHT GALLERY / NWT ARTS
Traditional Arts Cheryl
Delta
Designs
It In The
Pieces Kim
Reflected Connections RKV Blades Studio Silver Bliss
GALLERY 4
Art Jewellery &
Bare
Tools Charlotte
Art
Fibre Arts GALLERY 5 Claire
Glass Studio
Pottery potterybytolu
studio
Farm
Lakes
GALLERY 6
Candice Ring Studio Pottery Elizabeth
Art
Design
Goods Mouse River Pottery Pottery by
Rox Creative Terry
Treevival Reopens Nov 9 3. GALLERY LEVEL: 3 RD FLOOR

MulaireAnne

Rooftop Sculpture Garden WAG Studio Studio Digital Media Lab Clay Studio Studio Studio Penthouse Lobby Kiln GIIZHIG / KISIK Mezzanine Gallery Nakishkamohk 13 INUA Reopens Nov 94. PENTHOUSE LEVEL: 4TH FLOOR LEVEL 4 / PENTHOUSE LOBBY Anne
Mulaire April Allen Kristy King Maison Corazon May-Laine Bruce Simone's Rose LEVEL 4 / STUDIO 1 Beithe Clothing Hello Darling Co. Lennard Taylor Design Studio Inc. Sarah Sue Design Siggi Clothing

FEATURED ARTISTS

These talented artists have been selected for their original and high quality work. Learn more about the people behind the crafts.

Alina Tungilik • Kugaaruk, NU • Jewellery/Mixed Media • Level 3/Gallery 6

Alina Tungilik has lived consistently in Kugaaruk (Pelly Bay) and started carving at the age of 12. She was taught by her mother, Emily Illuitok’s older sister. The influence of her aunt, master artist Emily Pangnerk Illuitok, is very evident in her carving style. Alina’s works are in the classic Kugaaruk style, working in mixed materials incorporating inlays of ivory, whalebone, and caribou antler. Her carving reflects daily life in the community and the traditional Inuk ways of living on the land.

Aliza Amihude Art Jewellery & Ornaments • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery/Mixed Media • Level 3/Gallery 4

Aliza Amihude is an internationally recognized art jeweller whose playful approach emphasizes jewellery as sculpture for the body. She has exhibited and sold her one-of-a-kind jewellery across Canada and the world. Some of her clients include Susan Sarandon and the Honourable Adrienne Clarkson! Aliza challenges the economic and cultural standardization of precious metals and gems by mixing these with found objects considered monetarily worthless, such as branches and sand. She aims to create a change in people’s perceptions by using the ordinary in extraordinary ways.

Anastasia Pindera • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 4

Anastasia Pindera holds a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, where she focused on jewellery and metalsmithing. Pindera’s designs are mainly hand-carved in wax and cast in bronze and sterling silver. The body is the subject in Pindera’s contemporary jewellery, which examines gender, sexuality, and Western beauty ideals. Her objective is to challenge social conventions and encourage empowerment and everyday conversations. She is the recipient of several arts awards and has exhibited work internationally.

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Anne Mulaire • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

Andréanne Mulaire Dandeneau was born and raised in SaintBoniface, Manitoba. She is of Ojibwa/French Métis ancestry and has created her Heritage clothing line to honour Canada’s French, Indigenous, and Métis character. Andréanne is committed to fair trade, environmental stewardship, and ethical business practices which has lead to Anne Mulaire’s Just-In-Time philosophy and waste-reducing circular manufacturing model. With comfort and versatility at the forefront of design, Anne Mulaire is an expression of heritage, beauty, and pride. In 2022, Andréanne celebrated 17 years as a designer and manufacturer, right here in Winnipeg.

Ashoona Studios • Elie, MB • Mixed Media • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Goota Ashoona is a third generation, female Inuit artist from Cape Dorset, Nunavut. From a long line of well-known artists, Ashoona, along with her artist husband Bob Kussy and their twin sons Joe Jaw and Samueli Ashoona, founded and run Ashoona Studios, currently operating in Elie, Manitoba. Produced both individually and collaboratively, their work is part autobiographical and part historical, detailing stories from their family life. Many carvings are made from whalebone and black argilite but often mixed with other materials such as caribou antler, soapstone, copper, and claws.

Bambi’s Traditional Arts • Inuvik, NT • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Driven by her passion and grounded by her roots, Bambi Amos’ focus is on gaining knowledge and continuing to make artwork for all to enjoy. She loves to share and teach her traditional Inuvialuit knowledge by guiding sewing classes. Bambi started selling her creations in 2012. Her artwork can be found on the Proudly Indigenous Crafts and Designs website as well as on Bambi’s Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook page.

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Bare No Tools • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 4

Marissa Hoff (she/they) is a multidisciplinary artist from Winnipeg, MB. Marissa finds inspiration for her work through the connection between identity and space, and viewing interactions between fluid, shifting shapes. She began her interest in sculpture while studying Environmental Design at the University of Manitoba. Marissa now designs and creates simple form sculptural pendants and seeks to continue to break the binary of fashion and who can wear what based on their gender expression or size.

bead n butter • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 2/Mezzanine

bead n butter is an accessories brand owned by Jessie Pruden, a queer, disabled Metis artist from Winnipeg. Each piece is handmade using glass beads and other materials and every design is inspired by people in Jessie’s life. Bright and colourful, each piece is created with great intention, mixing a contemporary and traditional Metis design. bead n butter has been featured everywhere from Paris Fashion Week to Fashion Canada Magazine to the Instagrams of celebrities. Collaborating with her brother Noel, Jessie works out of her home, overseen by her pug-chihuhua, Bella.

Beithe Clothing • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Studio 1

Beithe is a small batch, eco-friendly clothing line that celebrates art, colour and texture. Hand-painted prints and quilted elements give a one-of-a-kind feel to the pieces. Working exclusively with natural fibers, each piece is thoughtfully designed. Loose cuts and timeless silhouettes give these garments longevity, letting them live in your wardrobe for years to come. All pieces are designed and made with care in Winnipeg by Kristy Menzies in her home based studio. A mix of comfort, sustainability, and style, each piece is available in sizes S to 5XL.

Brook Drabot Glass • Warren, MB • Glass • Level 2/Mezzanine

Glass homewares and decor bring handmade inspiration to your every day. Working out of her home studio, Brook melts and blows glass using a flameworking technique, along with propane and oxygen fuelled torches. By using scientific glass and slowly cooling each piece in a kiln she ensures each piece is as durable as it is beautiful.

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Candice Ring Studio Pottery • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 6

Candice Ring is a studio potter from Winnipeg who has always gravitated toward making utilitarian objects because of their familiarity and tactility. Her interest in the vessel early on in her formal training continues to propel her to create pieces in an attempt to connect with others both visually and through use. She is inspired by her sense of nostalgia for home, coupled with an interest in history and decoration, and uses them as building blocks for her creative process. She has made work, exhibited, and taught throughout North America, Australia, and China.

caneu • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Taanshi, Candace dishinihkashon. My spirit name is Leads With Light. I am a Métis artist, student, doula, sundancer, cedar bath practitioner, community worker, and facilitator from Winnipeg. Beading and creating jewellery is a way for me to process the things I do, hear, see, and feel in my daily life. I mainly make jewellery that combines traditional techniques and materials with contemporary design and materials. I am inspired by the work I do in the community and at school, songs, movies, my relationships, dreams, and ceremonies.

Cathie Ugrin Fabric Artist • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Cathie Ugrin is a Manitoba based fabric artist whose work is characterized by a rich and inventive use of colour, and a unique approach to both representational and geometrical design. Studying with a diverse collection of artists, she continually expands her artistic technique and approach. Her pieces have reached a broad audience and have found homes across Canada and the world. Cathie’s work has been accepted into numerous international exhibits and national juried shows. She is one of the founding members as well as the Events/ Exhibit Coordinator of the Textile and Fibre Artists of Manitoba.

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Charlie’s Charmed • Winnipeg, MB • Mixed Media • Level 2/Mezzanine

Charmed offers a modern twist on traditional men and women fashionable wearables. All products are built of natural materials, with a strict attention to details making each one as unique as the grain from the wood used. Charlie’s collections are ecofriendly, made in small batches, and delicately put together while incorporating their rich Indigenous and Filipino traditions and techniques. Elevate your style with a piece of nature that is as unique as you are!

Charlotte Sigurdson Art • Winnipeg, MB • Mixed Media • Level 3/Gallery 4

Charlotte Sigurdson is a sculpture and doll artist from Winnipeg. A life-long doll lover, Charlotte began her art career making bespoke toy dolls and over time her work evolved from toys to fine art sculpture. Her work draws on baroque imagery and has a subtle element of the grotesque. Conceptually, Charlotte’s work focuses on the human condition and how our humanity connects us through time and space. History is of particular importance in her work. Many of her pieces are inspired by specific historical events or the history of ideas.

Cheryl is an Indigenous woman born in Yellowknife, NT, who has transitioned from the academic (BED/Masters) and governmental (Senior Policy Analyst) world to producing Indigenous-inspired clothes, jewellery, and art. Cheryl constantly envisions how to create beauty from the natural world, using resources like sealskin, bison, moosehide and beads. Her belief is that inspired expression is a form of sustainable and divine trust to to be used toward the betterment of the world. The results is a holistic representation of her vision.

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Cheryl Fennell • Yellowknife, NT • Fibre/Textiles/Mixed Media • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

CJ Tennant Jewellery • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

CJ Tennant creates modern gemstone jewellery. Balancing edgy and elegant, embracing colour and texture, these stunning, quality pieces fulfill CJ’s goal of making every customer feel her best self and have a darn good time in the process. Her design philosophy is always to focus on the real-life needs and bodies of women, creating pieces that excite and flatter. The collections mix and layer so every woman can build a timeless style wardrobe all her own, all while adding the power of gemstones to her days.

Claire Johnston • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5

Claire Johnston (she/they) is a Michif beadworker. Claire’s practice is inspired by the many Métis grandmothers that came before them and their father Roy Johnston, who has supported their creative endeavors since childhood. They are grateful to have renowned Métis beadwork artist Jennine Krauchi as their teacher. Claire enjoys building relationships with the materials and the life from which they come, including smoked deer, moose hide, porcupine quills, and caribou antler. Claire is a member of the Two-Spirit Michif Local and organizes with Michif collective Red River Echoes.

Cloverdale Forge • Winnipeg, MB • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Matt Jenkins and Karen Rudolph are dedicated to designing and forging highly crafted work. With over 45 years of combined experience, they have honed their skills and learned traditional blacksmith techniques while studying with master smiths around the world. Matt has placed twice at the World Forging Championship in Stia, Italy, and in 2016 he completed a yearlong project where he designed and forged a different style hook every day. Between hammering on custom projects in their shop located in just north of Winnipeg, Manitoba, they lead workshops and demonstrate the ancient craft of blacksmithing across North America.

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Dine with us during Crafted at Katita café, steps away from the Visible Vault, or take your coffee and snacks to go.

Crystal Nykoluk Earthshaper

• Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 2/Mezzanine

Crystal is a shaper of earth transforming raw mud into hybrid forms of sculpture and pottery. She uses colourful dripping glazes applied over bark-like texture to show what she sees through her city-living lens: human-altered landscapes littered with small flashes of nature. It interests her to see spaces where both of these worlds coexist and magnify each other’s beauty. Crystal creates her work in her home studio in Winnipeg and also works as a Studio Technician at The Winnipeg Art Gallery.

Cypress Ceramic Studio • Wawanesa, MB • Ceramics • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Kevin Conlin runs Cypress Ceramic Studios and works for the Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba. His work has been shown and collected nationally and internationally in both private and public established collections. Loving clay even as a child, he took his first real ceramic class at Northern Arizona University and completed his BFA at the University of Regina. He went on to teach and work for the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and Red Deer College, and developed the ceramic program at Brandon University.

Daria Tittenberger • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5

Daria Tittenberger is a jewellery artist living and working in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Working predominately with off-loom beadweaving techniques, she uses a single needle and thread to sew glass beads together into three-dimensional wearable art. Informed by traditional fabric arts and inspired by contemporary forms of expression, she uses the repetition and layering of simple geometric shapes to create beadwoven jewellery with complex textures, patterns, and shapes.

Incomparable Carvings

20 FEATURED ARTISTS
Nuliajuk by Koomuatuk (Kuzy) Sapa Curley

dconstruct

Winnipeg, MB

Jewellery

Level 2/Mezzanine

Lisa and Sean Reico are Winnipeg based artists inspired by their love for and interest in minimalist design and modern architecture. Together, their mission is to innovate, through their use of unique elements, and to support the community at large by using ecofriendly materials, such as 40% recycled resins which incorporate organic materials and hand-woven weaves developed by skilled artisans in diverse regions around the world. Their respective decade long interest and passion for architecture and design inspired them to start dconstruct jewelry.

Debra Frances • Winnipeg, MB • Books/Paper • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Debra is a book artist whose distinct materials are sourced from the places most meaningful to her; their personal significance finds its place as they become functional books made to hold and preserve individual experience. Nearly fifteen years training in the precise art of bookbinding allows for Debra to strike an elegant balance between fine technique and innovative play. Her work ranges from classic leather journals to sculptural artworks featuring self-preserved fish leather and ocean sourced driftwood.

Delta Debz Designs • Fort Smith, NT • Jewellery • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Debbie Dillon was born in Inuvik, but now calls Fort Smith home. She comes from a family of diverse cultural backgrounds: Inuvialuit, Gwich’in, Cree and Métis. She is a self-taught beader who finds inspiration and creativity through nature. Debbie has discovered in her beading journey a newfound passion for learning and connecting to her culture in ways she had never imagined.

Do It In The Sahtu

Norman Wells, NT

Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Fibre/Textiles/Jewellery

Loretta Wiley is originally from Tulita. She now lives, works and creates in Norman Wells. As a Gwich’in and Dene freelance artist, Loretta creates different types of artwork using beads, furs, hides, birch bark and fish scales. She loves to challenge herself to try new art forms and techniques whenever inspiration strikes. She is also passionate about listening to other people and always feels inspired by their stories.

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Earth and Hide • Niverville, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Earth and Hide is a lifestyle brand that focuses on high quality leather goods with a timeless rugged quality. Their product is connected with its owner through the things it carries, and the way it’s used. Every customer has a unique story and their product will become an integral part of that story especially through consistent use. Earth and Hide love the process of making their products, the smell, the feel, and when their customers GUSH about their leather goods!

Elizabeth Gordon Art • Bowmanville, ON • Mixed Media • Level 3/Gallery 6

Elizabeth (ilisapi) Gordon is a self-taught mixed media artist, born and raised in Iqaluit, NU, who now lives in Ontario. Gourds are her special choice of natural materials to grow and work with where she paints, wood burns, sculpts and carves to depict northern imagery and Inuit legends. Her other artistic interests include: doll making, painting, sewing, sculpting polymer clay faces of Inuit elders, and jewellery making. Elizabeth enjoys travelling to the north to share and teach youth and adults the fun in making art.

Erin Konsmo • Brandon, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 6

Erin Konsmo (they/them/she/her) is a Prairie queer of Métis and settler Canadian descent. They grew up in central Alberta and are a member of the Métis Nation of Alberta. Erin’s arts practice currently focuses on fish scale art, a discipline that they were mentored into by Métis artist Jaime Morse. Using macro photography and digital art, Erin seeks to magnify the gifts from the fish by taking small-in-scale gifts and digitally scaling them up in size.

Fat Daug • Otterburne, MB • Jewellery • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Candace Lipischak is a multidisciplinary Métis artist from Manitoba. She is the owner and jewellery designer for her company Fat Daug (Father-Daughter). Candace learned her craft from her father Larry. Inspired by her heritage and by nature, their pendants and earrings are hand-carved out of moose, deer, caribou and wapiti antler. Each piece is unique, organic, meant to keep you grounded.

22 FEATURED ARTISTS

Golden Willow Co. • Yellowknife, NT • Jewellery • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Leanne Niziol is a Dene artist from Pehdzeh Ki (Wrigley). She is Dehcho Dene and Shúhtagot’ine. Her beading is inspired by AmaCaroline Moses. Leanne’s creations are deeply rooted in her Dene culture and carry a unique contemporary undrestanding. She uses traditional Dene mediums to create wearable art including home-tanned hide, caribou hair, antler and porcupine quills. All materials are ethically and traditionally harvested. Leanne takes great pride in her craft as it has been passed down from many generations.

Haley Alakan White

• Rankin Inlet, NU • Mixed Media • Level 3/Gallery 6

Haley Alakan White is a Nunavut based mixed media artist that was raised in her home town of Rankin Inlet, Nunavut. As an Inuk artist, Alakan primarily uses items from the land such as antler and furs. Using her sewing skills learned from her family, she began seriously sewing in 2019. Adding to her artistic knowledge, she picked up skills from local elders; Alakan’s works have grown to include other mediums such as beading, tufting, print-making and carving. She also has started to teach community youth by passing along her skills and knowledge.

Happyland Print Shop • Winnipeg, MB • Books/Paper • Level 2/Mezzanine

Happyland Print Shop Inc. is a creative project by graphic designer and illustrator Kristin McPherson. Using print as her medium, Kristin creates original design and illustration themed around life in the centre of Canada. Launched by accident in 2012, the first set of Happyland prints were created as a cheap social prize! Her collection of work has since grown to include art, wearable items, housewares and more, inspired by all of the odd and interesting things that make Winnipeg unique.

Helen Gair Millinery • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 2/Mezzanine

Helen Gair creates fine hats & headpieces. Handsewn couture pieces blending traditional techniques and modern sensibilities. With a background in historic costume, Helen blocked her first hat twenty years ago. After deciding to pursue millinery as an art form, she has repeatedly travelled to England to study under a variety of millinery masters. A carefully curated selection of the finest materials from their characteristic countries permits Helen to handcraft precision trims, supplemented by meticulously sourced genuine vintage, never-sold deadstock.

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Hello Darling Co.

Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles

Level 4/Studio 1

Miriam Delos Santos is the designer behind Hello Darling Co., a small business specializing in sustainable, inclusive women’s accessories and fashion. Miriam is passionately involved with local student internships, empowering women of colour in business, and teaches at the local fashion college. Hello Darling has been seen in fashion articles for Vanity Fair, Refinery 29, The Globe and Mail, Winnipeg Free Press and the Vancouver Sun.

Herman de Vries

• Winnipeg, MB

Wood/Metal/Stone

Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

For Herman, wood turning is a labour of love which began when he needed a desk and could not afford to buy one. He built his own. At first, he never considered this an art but, as time went on, the wood began to “speak” to him and soon every piece of firewood became a fresh opportunity. Taking wood from a dying tree on his parent’s 1920’s homestead and turning it into a piece of art preserved something that represented his mother and father. He was able to leave a legacy and a piece of art that people would enjoy.

i-co globes

• Winnipeg, MB • Wood/Metal/Stone

Level 2/Mezzanine

Ande Brown (they/he), a mixed media artist, creates i-co globes. Ande enjoys incorporating both traditional craftsmanship and new technologies. Ande’s work combines a background in geospatial technology with a passion for maps, solo motorcycle travel, adventure and human connection. The i-co name reflects the shape, an icosahedron, the 20 faces on the globe, and also a love of interpersonal connection through intercontinental travel.

Johanna Brierley Jewellery Design

Level 2/Mezzanine

Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery

Founded in 2007, Johanna Brierley Jewellery Design has become known for the Lucky Stone Collection inspired by hole stones found on the shores of Lake Winnipeg in Gimli, Manitoba. JBJD recently launched a colourful collection called 4 Corners in response to the pandemic. The four colour-blocked sections of gemstones represent the four points of a compass reminding us that our directions in life, though unexpected, do continue. This year, JBJD is celebrating 15 years in business and is thrilled to celebrate with everyone at CRAFTED.

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FEATURED ARTISTS

Jonasie was born in Qaqortoq (The Snow White Town) on October 1, 1944 and his formative years were spent immersed in Inuit culture in the small Inuit hamlets of Alluisup Paa and Narsaq. There, Jonasie was introduced to the history and art of the Greenlandic Vikings. Jonasie brought his unique Greenlandic Inuit and Viking artistic creations with him when he immigrated to Canada in 1974. He is a renowned carver, sailor, and navigator. He is known for his carvings of the Greenlandic Inuit Sea Goddess Imap Ukua swimming with her hair as waves around the Umiaq skin boat.

Julianna Zwierciadlowska-Rhymer • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 4

Julianna is an artist from the Prairies of southern Manitoba. She works primarily in clay, but also extends her practice to include a variety of other materials. Her current body of work investigates our relationship to food. She received her first Bachelor of Fine Art from the University of Manitoba and her BFA (studio) from the Emily Carr University of Art and Design. In June 2021, Julianna defended her thesis and graduated with a Masters of Fine Art from the University of Manitoba.

Junebug Design • Winnipeg, MB • Glass • Level 3/Gallery 6

Working with fused glass allows me to work in a medium that gives me a sense of freedom, to take risks and to push my creative soul. I draw inspiration for my work from my surroundings and places visited. I work with handmade sheet glass, frit (crushed glass in various granular sizes) and vitro-graph (molten glass pulled to create glass string). Layer upon layer is built up like a collage and fused together in a kiln. The reveal is always exciting and unpredictable.

A FASHION SHOW | 2022

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Jonasie Faber • Qaqortoq, Greenland • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall
FEATURING 25 FALL/WINTER COLLECTIONS Missed the show? CRAFTED: A Fashion Show can be viewed online at wag.ca/show November 15

KAJA Design

Fibre/Textiles

Level 3/Gallery 6

Karen Kerr is an artist who works from her studio in Winnipeg, MB. She designs and crafts bowls, baskets, and purses using natural unbleached cotton rope of varying widths. Each contemporary design is meticulously machine sewn with some incorporating accents of leather, wood, cork and fabric. Karen’s unique rope creations are works of art providing beauty, quality, and functionality to any decor.

Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Kami is a self-taught multidisciplinary fibre artist who creates plush characters and soft sculptures for humans to enjoy. Forest walks and the garden, moods, textures and animals real or imagined inspire her creative process. Her work has been exhibited internationally in the US, Canada and Germany, as well as published in magazines focusing on the creators of plush toys.

Karen is an eclectic artist influenced by modern and medieval architecture, and the beauty of the skies, lakes, and trees found in the Manitoba landscape. She embraces the challenge of designing 3D small sculptures as personal adornment. Her fusion of form and function in sterling silver, with attention to texture and detail, enables wearers to best express their own individuality. Having taught a Jewellery and Metalsmithing Program for many years, she has benefitted from her experience in the studio and the many workshops she has attended throughout her expanding career.

Arctic Bay, NU

Fibre/Textiles

Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Kataisee Attagutsiak loves to paint and her favorite subjects are Taliilajuq (also known as Sedna), women wearing beautiful traditional amautis (baby carriers), and traditional women’s clothing. She has won the Northwestel telephone book art cover contest twice. Kataisee enjoys block printing and making beautiful modern clothing using traditional methods for women’s shirts and girls’ parkas. Inspired by her mother’s way of sewing, Kataisee uses colours that identify the families which they belong to. Beading is also included in her garments; she loves to showcase how a little bead can create so much beauty.

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Winnipeg, MB
Kami Goertz
Winnipeg, MB
Fibre/Textiles
Karen Schmidt Humiski Studio • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 2/Mezzanine Kataisee Attagutsiak
FEATURED ARTISTS

Katharina Nuss

Winnipeg, MB

Fibre/Textiles

Level 2/Mezzanine

Katharina Nuss has a B.F.A. Honours from the University of Manitoba and had worked as a Graphic Designer until becoming a parent to three energetic children. Doing most of her creative work on the computer never felt quite right, as she is drawn to more immediate creative processes such as printmaking and textile arts. Homegrown and foraged plant materials, as well as reclaimed and recycled items, feature prominently in her work, and she loves the back and forth of a creative process.

Kelli Rey Studio

Winnipeg, MB

Ceramics

Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Kelli Rey is an artist who works from her studio in Winnipeg. She is sparked by early to mid-20th century design, defamiliarization, experiments, and colour. Artfully designing ceramics and incorporating aspects that may surprise, puzzle or entertain is what she likes to do. She has received numerous grants and awards which have enabled her to continuously learn and bring new ideas to fruition. Kelli has a BFA in Ceramics, a BEd from the University of Manitoba and a diploma in Graphic Design from Red River College.

K’estuwe Pieces

Hay River, NT

Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Jewellery/Wood/Textiles

Suzanne Boucher-Hanna was born in DeninuK’ue First Nation, her family is originally from Rocher River. Adopted by her maternal grandparents, Suzanne was raised in a traditional way of life on the land. She learned how to hunt, trap, harvest, and sew. Her inspiration for sewing comes from her grandmother (mother) and while she uses traditional materials, she incorporates a modern flare. Suzanne has passed down her traditional sewing skills to her daughter Skye who also sews for K’estuwé Pieces.

Kim Ruben • Inuvik, NT • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Kim is from Paulatuk and moved to Inuvik in 2017, where she still resides. She has been making artwork since 2000. She learned how to sew and make traditional items when she was a child, having been taught by multiple Elders from Paulatuk and other northern communities. Kim sells her artwork locally one-on-one, or at the Arctic Market in Inuvik. She also likes to share pictures of her artwork on Facebook to reach a wider audience.

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Lavinia van Heuvelen, jeweller by trade, was born and raised in Bowmanville, ON and moved to Iqaluit 11 years ago. She spends time in both places. She studied Jewellery and Metalwork at Nunavut Arctic College, and after graduating, pursued working full time as a Jeweller at LVH Jewellery. Her work is primarily in Sterling silver and materials gifted or purchased from local hunters. Van Heuvelen is inspired by the north and her surroundings.

From street markets to pop-up stores the Lennard Taylor Brand has really grown over the years. After years of momentum his hard work birthed his flagship boutique where the designer continues to grow his label. He now travels across North America showing his one of a kind designs and artwork. Lennard continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible while getting international recognition for his outstanding design, exquisite paintings, and inspirational words. Lennard Taylor is truly a modern day renaissance man who works hard to live up to his life’s purpose – smile and feel good.

Lii Belwê Designs • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5

Kiera Kowalski is a Michif (Red River Métis) beadwork artist based in Winnipeg, MB. She has been beading for just over a year and enjoys working with various mediums including vintage beads and caribou hair. “Lii Belwe” Beads is named after the abundant blueberries that grow near her family’s property in Lac Du Bonnet, which forever remind her of her grandfather. When she is not beading, or spending time at her family cabin, Kiera can be found at the Kishaadigeh Collaborative Research Centre working as a health research coordinator.

Explore the Gallery during your CRAFTED visit. Check out Robert Houle: Red is Beautiful in Galleries 7-9

Robert Houle. O-ween du muh waun (We Were Told) 2017. Oil on canvas, triptych. © Robert Houle.

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Lavinia van Heuvelen • Iqaluit, NU • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 6 Lennard Taylor Design Studio Inc. • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Studio 1
FEATURED ARTISTS

Magpie Chiq • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Gallery 5

Born and raised near Kenora in Northwestern Ontario, Sheila Cailleau is the founder and owner of Magpie Chiq in Winnipeg. Inspired by nature and her Metis roots, Sheila works with leather and fur to create beautiful, luxurious and functional items: boots, mitts, shoes, and bags. Each handcrafted, hand-sewn item captures the authenticity of our northern land as we live it today, in a coffee shop, at a hockey rink, a summer festival, on a frozen lake, wherever your spirit takes you. Thank you for celebrating her designs.

Maison Corazon • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

Mercedes grew up surrounded by art, music and culture in the magnetic city of Buenos Aires. She obtained degrees both in Fashion Design and Textile Design from the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Urbanism of Universidad de Buenos Aires. Her multifaceted background includes textile print & graphic design, textile homewares design, trend hunting, and fashion. Currently she is the creative mind and designer of her own brand, Maison Corazon. She creates handmade capsule collections with a strong narrative, encouraging wearers to express themselves through the art of dressing.

Margaret Jane Design • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 2/Mezzanine

Christie Peters is a self-taught fibre artist who has been wet-felting wool for the past 15 years. Margaret Jane design is named for her mother and grandmother, the original makers in her life. She is endlessly fascinated with the many ways that wool can be transformed and is always dreaming up new designs. She takes inspiration from all of the colours and shapes and shadows in the natural world and from the people who wear her pieces.

Mathew Nuqingaq • Iqaluit, NU • Jewellery • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Mathew Nuqingaq is an Iqaluit-based artist who works primarily in jewellery design. Nuqingaq’s talent for working with metal and his desire to represent Inuit culture and traditions through his work result in unique, wearable pieces of art. In 2007, Nuqingaq founded Aayuraa Studio in Iqaluit where he works alongside both emerging and established artists. The studio is named after snow goggles with the subtext meaning of protecting the artistic vision of Inuit artists.

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Mawdsley Fibre Arts • Winnipeg, MB • Wood • Level 3/Gallery 4

Helen is a fibre artist and woodturner with Hungarian and Norwegian ancestry. Sawdust is her glitter and some of her products include wood bowls and spindles make from maple, cherry, and walnut. She enjoys being curious and exploring history, traditions, and new forms of craft. Her work has appeared in Spin Off magazine and Piecework magazine by Long Thread Media, Digits & Threads, Laine Publishing Oy in Finland, and at the Manitoba Centre for Craft.

May-Lain Siusangnark • Naujaat, NU • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

May-Lain Siusangnark is a married mother of three who lives in Naujaat, Nunavut. She started learning sewing at the age of 12 and her first project was a pair of mitts using old clothing. May-Lain has studied and instructed sewing classes. She has always liked fashionable clothing and despite the odds has persevered, now making clothing for other people. May-Lain honours her mother as a role model and is proud to say that her work is admired in her community. She desires is to teach other people so that they can engage in sewing projects to have a better future.

McMillan Pottery • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 5

Everything that goes into David’s pottery is dug by hand in Manitoba. The different clays and sands are each carefully researched and harvested, all processing done by hand. The glazes on his work come from wood ash and different rocks that he crushes. For the final step David fires the pots in his wood burning kiln with trees that are sustainably harvested from his own wood lot. David takes pride and care in harvesting everything that goes into these pots to make truly local and sustainable functional pottery.

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FEATURED ARTISTS
Untitled drawing by Padloo Samayualie this Holiday Season

Meg Does Pottery

Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 2/Mezzanine

Meg creates dynamic original works in her home studio in Winnipeg. Her F/W 22 collection includes wabi sabi forms, mixed colorful clay, wheel thrown vessels and hand-sculpted objects of interest. Meg is a former student of the WAG clay studio and works part time as a professional commercial artist – her works are sold across the country and have been published in the Globe and Mail, British Vogue and Elle Quebec, to name a few.

Melanie Alagalak

Arviat, NU

Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

Melanie is the mother of 2 girls and works full time in Health Care. Although she has a busy life, with work and family, she takes time each day of the week to sew. Initially taught the basics of sewing from her mom, Melanie now has over 10 years of experience in sewing. Through years of experience, she is capable and happy to sew all sizes in various styles for men, women, and children. Melanie takes pride in her skills and techniques, and it is something that she is constantly learning and gaining knowledge in.

Metalissima Glass Studio

Winnipeg, MB • Glass • Level 3/Gallery 5

Patricia’s love for colour and contemporary design are the hallmarks of her glass art. Her unique fused glassware embodies her use of bold colour and patterns. Patricia has a degree in Fine Arts degree from the University of Manitoba. She worked in marketing most of her professional career but has returned to her artistic roots to satisfy her need to add colour to her surroundings.

Metro Grade Goods

• Winnipeg, MB

Wood/Metal/Stone

Level 3/Gallery 6

Eric Au is a multi-disciplinary industrial designer and maker. He’s been cutting his fingers crafting things since he could barely hold a saw. He works closely with new manufacturing technologies and melds them with modern materials to produce unique interpretations of common objects. Inspired by strong graphic design, bold contrast, and functional aesthetics, he strives to produce work that can enhance everyday life. The result is a hand-finished, high quality, pragmatic product that seeks out a life time of weathering.

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Michinos • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Gallery 5

I am a self-taught fabric natural dyer whose inspirations are rooted in Japanese traditional practices. I went to art school in Japan and immigrated to Canada almost 15 years ago. I have four children and as they get older, it has allowed my desire to create within me grow. ZUDABUKURO is a traditional Japanese bag that was originally used by Buddhist monks and now are commonly used in Japan by many different people. I dye my ZUDABUKURO with natural ingredients, like the waste part of vegetables, fruit skins, and pits and flowers that I gather and grow myself. I feel like I’m introducing my culture to Canada, which makes me very happy.

Mouse River Pottery • Wawanesa, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 6

Angela Graham is a ceramic artist living in rural Manitoba. She is fascinated by the idea of highly decorated tools, and the inherent personality in hand built ceramics. The pieces are an exploration in joy. The decoration is based on the plants and flowers that thrive on the prairies, and takes inspiration from the exuberance of nature and a wild Manitoba garden. This work is meant to be part of a celebration of daily activities — an honoring of the labour involved in daily life.

Neyats’e Beads

• Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5

Samantha and Kristina from Neyats’e Beads are sisters who create one-of-a-kind, hand-woven, beaded jewelry. They use various materials in their craft like shells, animal hair, and hides. Samantha and Kristina are Carrier from Stellat’en First Nation but grew up and live in Winnipeg. They make every effort to use as many natural materials as possible in their work, to honour their ancestors and the powerful connection that Indigenous people have with the land.

Nimis Design

• Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 2/Mezzanine

I am Blanche Chief, the artist behind Nimis Design, Nimis meaning “big sister” in Cree. I’m a self-taught artist who enjoys sharing my work and passing on my traditional culture. I design jewellery made with beads, tanned moose and deer hide, antler bone, birchbark, porcupine quills, caribou hair and sweetgrass. As a First Nations woman, I have had to face many challenges. It is through my Indigenous culture and creative process that I have found the strength to stand proud, find healing, and connect to my people.

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FEATURED ARTISTS

Oak Hammock Pottery • St. Andrews, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 5

Alan has been working in clay for almost fifty years. He is known for his expertise in wood firing: teaching, exhibiting, and building kilns in Canada, USA, Australia, China, Korea, Thailand, Cambodia, and Croatia. He is past president of the Manitoba Crafts Council and a lifetime member of the Winnipeg Art Gallery-Qaumajuq. He is currently a mentor for MAWA. He has just returned from Croatia having conducted a wood firing workshop in the kiln he built four years ago.

Onte Sews • Fort Simpson, NT • Jewellery/Fibre • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Catherine Blondin is from Liidli Kue (Fort Simpson), NT. She is Shutagotine (Mountain Dene). The name of her business comes from her Dene name, Onte, which means “she is”. It was gifted to her by her father and was her great grandmother’s name. Catherine learned to sew from elders and sewing groups around the north. She uses traditional methods of harvesting materials, and the hides she use are from hunters within her community, family, or region. The rest is purchased from northern or Indigenous owned shops. Catherine’s artwork reflects her culture and the beautiful land of Denendeh.

Paul Malliki • Naujaat, NU • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Paul Malliki was born in an outpost camp near the community of Igloolik, Nunavut, and began carving at the age of five. A selftaught artist, he learned to

by watching others and by studying animals while out hunting. Today the influential sculptor lives in Naujaat, where he carves both animals and human figures. His spirited animals are dramatically posed and finely finished. When he is not carving, Paul enjoys working with his dog team, hunting, and building.

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carve
WAG–QAUMAJUQ MEMBERSHIP Your support as a member of the WAG fuels dynamic programming that keeps our community connected. Learn more and sign up at wag.ca/member. Questions? We’d love to hear from you! Contact Brigitte at membership@ wag.ca or 204.789.1764 Maureen Gruben. Waiting for the Shaman, 2017. Bones from polar bear paws and resin. photo: @121.justice

Growing up in a very creative household, Kathryne Koop loved to make things. When introduced to clay through a community pottery class she knew this was her medium. After receiving her BFA from the University of Manitoba she began working as a full-time functional potter, launching a life long career which now spans more than 40 years. Working with porcelain clay, Koop investigates new approaches to familiar objects that balance aesthetics with both form and function. She creates unique pieces that are gestural, elegant, and a pleasure to display when not in use.

Toludare Toluwalope (PhD) is a professional ceramist from Nigeria who has been teaching and practicing ceramics since 2011. His curiosity for ceramics is more into solving mysteries, which is evident in his scientific research publications. He has a passion for pottery and has mastered advanced throwing skills with interest in making large forms on the potter’s wheel. He generates harmony for thrown wares with dexterity showing African/Asian master class. He’s learnt ceramics in the crudest way with a wealth of experience in working things around to get any desired result in ceramics.

Rachael Kroeker is a full time ceramic artist based in Winnipeg where she has been creating functional tableware for the past 12 years. She specializes in a technique called slip casting, where coloured clay is poured into plaster molds creating unique, one-of-a-kind pieces. Along with her signature style of marbled pottery, Rachael also explores bold colour and pattern combinations in her new lines of work. With a modern, contemporary feel and exquisite craftsmanship, her pieces are designed to beautify life and enrich daily routines.

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Pottery by Kathryne Koop • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 6 potterybytolu • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 5 Rachael Kroeker Ceramics • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 5
FEATURED ARTISTS

Red Earth Ceramic Jewelry • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 6

Beth Ann McIvor gently presses traditional plant medicines and various beading in clay. After the clay is dried, it is low kiln fired, sanded, hand painted and fired again. With each firing the clay gains integrity and becomes stronger. The impressions left on the clay reflect the memory of our healing medicines, while the clay demonstrates its ability to become more resilient after withstanding harsh conditions. Beth-Ann McIvor (she/her) is Métis/Hungarian/Irish from Treaty 1, Winnipeg, Manitoba and making jewelry is truly a labor of love and ceremony for her.

Reflected Connections • Fort Simpson, NT • Jewellery • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Ashley Okrainec is a Métis artist from Liidlii Kue (Fort Simpson). She identifies as Teetl’it Gwich’in, Polish, Ukrainian, English, and Irish. Her parents met in Liidlii Kue and that is where she was born and raised. Ashley has been learning traditional arts all her life from her mother and other talented artists in the Dehcho region of the NT. The art she produces represents those connections as well as her connection to the land, animals, people, and her culture.

RKV Blades • Inuvik, NT • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Rory Voudrach was born and raised in Tuktoyaktuk, and now lives in Inuvik, NT. He has a strong passion to create Inuit ulu and hunting knives using traditional methods and materials. While creating, he can’t help to imagine the appreciation and pride Inuit men of the past felt as they created a tool that would help his family survive. RKV Blades can be purchased through Facebook or Instagram. Rory dedicates each ulu he makes to his mother and all Elders.

Rosemarie Péloquin • St-Pierre-Jolys, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Gallery 6

Rosemarie Péloquin sculpts wool. Her portraits and vignettes are expressions of moments in time that we can connect with in our shared humanity. Her work emerges from a background in design and teaching, a career in Parks Canada, and her rural francophone roots. Her work has been featured in magazines, books, online, exhibitions, and radio all across Canada. This May, she presented two life size busts of HRH the Prince of Wales and Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II to Prince Charles during the Royal Tour of Canada.

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Rox Creative • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/Gallery 6

I started quilting while recovering from Breast Cancer treatment. Quilting focused my mind and hands and inspired me. Slowly, I began to share my work with the community and did my first market where I was recognized and which moved me to the national stage. I have been featured in House and Home Magazine as one of the “Canadian Quilters to Watch” October 2021 issue. This summer I am a contributing artist in the Collections Agency Exhibit by the MCML.

Salvaged Earth Designs • Winnipeg, MB • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 2/Mezzanine

Salvaged Earth Designs is a small, eco-friendly business that has been creating fine-crafted artisan wares out of wood and other natural materials since 1994. Today, Salvaged Earth Designs makes unique wooden kitchen utensils from salvaged and upcycled materials. The woods are collected from all sorts of interesting sources: off-cuts and discards from furniture makers, musical instrument makers, hardwood flooring companies, discarded hardwood pallets, arborist tree prunings and tree removals, or things found at thrift stores or on the forest floor. Salvaged Earth Designs takes things that others discard and turns them into something beautiful!

Sarah Sue Design • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Studio 1

Modern sustainable clothing made with natural and sustainable exquisite fabric. Bamboo, silk, hemp, cotton, linen and eco-friendly textiles are used in creating minimalistic and contemporary silhouettes that are timeless. Sarah creates items that are wearable pieces of art. She creates small batch collections that focus on slow fashion and includes in the collection zero-waste items, hand-dyed pieces, and one-of-a-kind pieces. She creates boxy cardigans, flowy tunics, and tops that focus on being inclusive in sizing to look fabulous on all women. Sizes XS – 5X. All made in Winnipeg!

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FEATURED ARTISTS

Shiny Raven Club • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

My name is Hailey Urilyon, I am a mixed Cree artist from the Northwest-Territories, currently based in Winnipeg, MB, in Treaty 1 Territory. I am a member of Norway House Cree Nation through my mom’s side. I love beading from pop culture and nature. I hope to create beadwork that people will find just as much joy wearing as I do making them.

Siggi Clothing • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Studio 1

I live, design, and produce clothing on Treaty 1 Territory in Winnipeg, MB. I work with simple silhouettes that just feel darn good to wear, that also look fun and striking, confident and strong. Every garment is carefully made in small batches or made-to-measure with the nicest linens, organic cotton, and sustainably sourced natural textiles. Transparency and quality are top priority with every piece produced, while striving to minimize its impact on the planet.

Simone’s Rose • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

Michelle Maynard is a Manitoba resident who uses textiles as a medium to create artful, well-crafted fashion that is intended to last for generations. Her studio is located on Treaty 1 territory where she designs and produces each garment by hand. Her focus is on producing thoughtful, made to order garments using natural fibres as well as vintage and deadstock textiles. Inspired by the environment and nature, zero waste methods and sustainable sourcing/production are at the forefront of each collection.

SOL Designs • St-Pierre-Jolys, MB • Mixed Media • Level 2/Mezzanine

Sol Desharnais is known for his innovation by bringing new meaning to raw, natural and or upcycled materials. From his hometown of St-Pierre-Jolys, Manitoba, Sol creates unique and useful products by the clever improbable association of materials. His current collections include wooden sided handbags in both vinyl flooring and recycled rubber, as well as a colourful collection of accessories in eco-felt (wood and corn based). He is honoured to also partner with Smile – Epic of St. Malo, creating employment for adults living with different abilities.

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Stitched by April • Labrador City, NL • Jewellery • Level 4/Penthouse Lobby

April Allen is an eager, passionate, and enthusiastic Inuk artist with years of creative experience. A retired dental therapist, April is now spending most days creating beadwork and promoting the self-made business, “Stitched By April”. She has created unique beaded earrings using natural sealskin and silver fox fur. April’s passion as an Indigenous artist comes from the satisfaction of seeing the finished product and the feeling of pride that rushes through her.

Studio OCTAV

Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles • Level 3/ Gallery 5

Studio OCTAV is home to the embracive collection of textile art by artist, Graham Epp. Specializing in basketry and silk screen graphic design, Graham has made a profession in the arts since 2003. The baskets and vessels of studio OCTAV are designed and sewn by Graham using 100% Canadian sourced materials and home-made plant based dyes. Every vessel is one-of-a-kind and sewn into a functional sculpture for everyday living.

Studio Silver Bliss • Yellowknife, NT • Jewellery • Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Delia Cepoi grew up in Sibiu (Hermannstadt) Romania and felt close to the artistic world since a very early age. She holds a degree in Architecture and Urban Planning and her career spans over three decades and two continents. Delia has always explored anything and everything that involves design. She has sold over 2,500 pieces of jewelry globally. She draws her inspiration from all textures, colours, and materials and loves to create daring, statement jewelry. Her contemporary style is made for the confident, unconventional woman who wants to be noticed by making a sensational impact.

Taalrumiq

Tuktoyaktuk, NT

Level 3/Skylight Gallery

Fibre/Textiles/Jewellery

Taalrumiq is an Inuvialuk & Gwich’in Artist, Fashion Designer, Content Creator and Cultural Educator. She shares her Inuvialuit culture through fine art, Inuvialuit couture garments and accessories, and educational digital content. She inspires others to celebrate Indigenous identity and encourages healing of intergenerational trauma. In the tradition of her long matrilineal line of expert Inuit Seamstresses and Gwich’in Jijuus, she creates with the same talent, passion, skills and traditional materials as her ancestors with a contemporary vision.

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FEATURED ARTISTS

Teegan Walker Ceramics

Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 2/Mezzanine

Teegan Walker is a Manitoba artist with a strong passion for handmade tableware, ceramics, and design. He focuses on creating functional work that shows appreciation for tradition, but stretches to contemporary ideas regarding form and function. He draws influences from architecture, music, and landscape while maintaining a style that reflects a use of line, symmetry and minimalism. He has studied ceramics with Lin Xu at Brandon University. He is a proud recipient of the Marilyn Levitt Award for Functional Ceramics in 2018.

Terry Hildebrand

• Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 6

Originally from a small town in Manitoba, Terry graduated with an MFA in Ceramics from the University of Minnesota and received a BFA Honours degree from the University of Manitoba. From 2009–2011, he worked as studio technician in the ceramics department at the University of Manitoba. He taught at Medicine Hat College and has participated in multiple residencies at Medalta and the Banff Center while exhibiting nationally and internationally. Terry and his partner Miriam Rudolph are full time artists based in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The Strange Geranium • Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 2/Mezzanine

Ann Sokal is a jewellery maker, metalsmith, and graphic designer working and living in the geographic heart of North America: Winnipeg! Using traditional metalsmithing techniques including wax casting, hand forging, and construction, she crafts jewellery from sterling silver, brass, crystals, and mixed media, including vintage ceramics and ocular prosthesis. Her inspiration comes from the natural world that is beautiful but also that which is strange and embracing both simultaneously. The light and the dark. She aspires to create unique pieces which will radiate the energy and power that comes from this special duality.

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Lourdes Still is the founder of Masagana Flower Farm & Studio, a seasonal flower farm and dye studio in SouthEast Manitoba. She produces seasonal blooms and dye plants to make handmade, small-batch, naturally dyed textile goods. She started as a selftaught flower farmer and natural dyer, but has since trained on small-scale, high-intensity cut flower production through Floret Farm and Maiwa’s School of Textiles. She created Tinta, a three-hour dye-your-own wearable art experience where people can engage with plants and flowers and create with them through botanical eco-printing and indigo dyeing.

Treevival

• Winnipeg, MB • Wood/Metal/Stone • Level 3/Gallery 6

Weldon Neufeld has been crafting home décor, furniture, and custom pieces since 1977. He started Treevival as a way to combine his love of design with a desire to salvage materials that would’ve otherwise been burned or thrown away, turning them into works that are functional, beautiful, and made to be cherished.

Tricia Wasney’s jewellery is made mainly from recycled sterling silver. She experiments with mixing metals, incorporating wool and other materials, and uses fire and oxidation processes to create colour and texture. History, memory, scientific inquiry, geology and the landscape are constant inspirations in her work, much of which is intentionally warped and distressed. Tricia’s artwork has been shown in exhibitions at C2 Centre for Craft, the Buhler Gallery, Alberta Craft Council, School of Art Gallery at the University of Manitoba and at Milan Jewellery Week in Milan, Italy.

WINTER Art Classes @

Choose from classes for children, teens, and adults in drawing, painting, pottery, digital media and more! Check out our new Grown Up & Little 1 class for preschoolers and their caregivers! Registration opens Nov 22 at wag.ca/studio, Earlybird pricing til Dec 6.

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Tinta by Masagana Flower Farm • SouthEast Manitoba • Fibre/Textiles
Level 3/Gallery 5 Tricia Wasney Jewellery
Winnipeg, MB • Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5
FEATURED ARTISTS

Twin Lakes Stoneworks

Winnipeg, MB

Jewellery • Level 3/Gallery 5

Shauna Laurin, founder of Twin Lakes Stoneworks, crafts unique jewelry using a combination of beach stones, copper, and gems. She uses a variety of techniques including soldering, fold forming and patination processes using eco friendly hand made patinas. Her signature pieces include beach stones of all shapes and sizes sourced from Lake Manitoba. Each unique and earthy design is inspired by Manitoba’s flora and fauna and is an affirmation of the artist’s love of nature.

Wilder Goods • Winnipeg, MB • Fibre/Textiles

Level 1/Eckhardt Hall

Nathan Bezoplenko and Brendon Friesen are the owner/ operators of Wilder Goods and aim to create leather and canvas goods with a clean and modern aesthetic while remaining durable and practical. Nathan and Brendon are both interested and engaged in the ongoing development and refinement of the products they have made and new products waiting to take form. Wilder Goods operates as a brick and mortar retail and manufacturing studio in the historic Exchange District in downtown Winnipeg, MB as well as online at wilderwpg. com

Windhorse Pottery • Winnipeg, MB • Ceramics • Level 3/Gallery 5

Bernard Ferguson has a deep appreciation for nature which is innately functional, beautifully designed and expresses many purposes simultaneously. This appreciation and minimalist ideals have helped to influence and express his work. Empty vessels attract and lure many things and Bernard sometimes incorporates plant life into sculptural pieces. Bernard enjoys the mysteries of the natural world and trying to understand all the connections, patterns, and similarities woven into it.

Winnipeg North Of Fargo

Winnipeg, MB

Fibre/Textiles

Level 3/Gallery 5

Roy Liang was born in Gimli, Manitoba and is a child of the 70’s. Roy is inspired by vintage fabrics and reviving images from the past. He prints, cuts and sews fabric into fun household goods and accessories. He has been sewing much of his life and has taken art classes at Martha Street Studio. Roy’s motto is “Making things out of the mundane”, such as road signs, abandoned buildings, and odd pieces of history.

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CRAFTED: A FASHION SHOW GUEST DESIGNERS

CRAFTED Guest Designers are not vending at CRAFTED.

MICHEL DUMONT

Michel Dumont is a queer Ojibway French two-spirited disabled artist and survivor of intergenerational trauma stemming from Indian Day School. He currently resides in Thunder Bay. Michel enjoys breathing new life into the discarded vintage tile by making mosaic pieces. He also works in wearable art, using packing tape, mylar, cellophane and LED lights. He currently has been exploring installation art. He’s shown at Queer Landscapes, Queer Intersections at the John B. Aird (Toronto), and the Queer and Peace Vernissage, Dawson College, Montreal, Art in Resilience, (Paris, France), and Mirrored, Muu Art Gallery, (Helsinki, Finland).

VICTORIA’S ARCTIC FASHION

The creator of Victoria’s Arctic Fashion, Victoria Kakuqtinniq is a contemporary Inuk fashion designer originally from Kangiqliniq (Rankin Inlet), NU, now based in Iqaluit, NU. Influenced by the strong Inuit women she was surrounded by while growing up, many of whom were seamstresses (her mother, grandmother and sister among others), she found her passion after taking a traditional sewing class. Kakuktinniq is particularly known for using traditional Inuit forms like the atigi silhouette or kakiniit linework and blending them with contemporary design elements. Her designs have been featured in Paris, New York and Toronto fashion weeks, in Elle Canada magazine and, most recently, in partnership with Canada Goose for Project Atigi.

EVAN DUCHARME

Evan Ducharme is Metis from St. Ambroise, MB (Treaty 1). With both ancestral and contemporary Metis knowledge, his work examines Metis history and it’s cultural iconography with a subversion of colonial notions of gender, queerness, and relations to place. Ducharme’s work has been featured in National Geographic, FASHION Magazine, Vogue.com, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute exhibition In America: A Lexicon of Fashion. Ducharme currently lives and creates with gratitude on his home territories, St. Ambroise, MB (Treaty 1).

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Fashion by Hafsa is a progressive artistic line of clothing designed for the modern modest woman. Hafsa uses influences from her experiences from different cultures to create a unique line of modest clothing. Being designed to be worn by anyone regardless of belief is important as Hafsa's vision is to bring the old world into the new world, to respect the past while modernizing to prepare for the future. Authentic custom embroidery and painted designs stand out to promote a woman's forward fashion sense while respecting one’s preferences and beliefs, regardless of body type or background.

PRETTY WINDY DESIGNS

Wendy Sinclair is a fashion designer and experienced seamstress. She was born and raised in Brokenhead Ojibway Nation, MB. She is the founder of the brand, Pretty Windy Designs, which has been operating since 2016. She is a graduate of the Fashion Design and Apparel production program at MC College, as well as Business Administration from Red River College. This past summer Pretty Windy Designs was featured at the Indigenous Fashion Arts festival marketplace in Toronto, where they were spotlighting Manitoba Artists. Wendy aims to represents Indigenous culture through the clothing she creates.

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Select parkas from Victoria's Arctic Fashion available at

CRAFTED FASHION SHOW ORDER OF EVENTS

6pm – doors open, cash bar in Eckhardt Hall

6:30pm - guests are invited to find a seat on Level 3 in Galleries 1,2,4, Qilak

7pm – runway show begins, order of collections: Anne Mulaire • page 15 Siggi Clothing • page 37 Maison Corazon • page 29

Wendy Sinclair/Pretty Windy Designs • page 43 Sarah Sue Design • page 36 Fashion by Hafsa • page 43 Simone’s Rose • page 37 Hello Darling • page 24 Beithe Clothing • page 16 Lennard Taylor Design Studio • page 28 Evan Ducharme • page 42 Stitched by April • page 38 Cheryl Fennell • page 18 Kim Ruben • page 27 Taalrumiq • page 38 Do It In The Sahtu • page 21 Bambi’s Traditional Arts • page 15 Studio Silver Bliss • page 38 Victoria’s Arctic Fashion • page 42 Melanie Alagalak • page 31 May-Laine Siusangnark • page 30 Kataisee Attagutsiak • page 26 Michel Dumont • page 42

WAG-Qaumajuq Permanent Collection

8 pm – champagne reception in Eckhardt Hall

8:30pm – guest speakers: Tammy Sutherland (MCC), Theresie Tungilik (GN), Nikki Komaksiutiksak (Tunngasugit), emcee Julia Lafreniere (WAG)

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Closing the runway show are highlighted pieces from the Winnipeg Art Gallery-Qaumajuq's extensive collection of Inuit Art, including a beaded amauti made by Ulayok Lucy Kaviok of Arviat, NU; a sealskin jacket by Sophie Pamak of Hopedale, NL; and a floral Mother Hubbard parka.

CRAFTED runway models will be wearing and carrying accessories by the following CRAFTED artists:

Aliza Amihude, Anastasia Pindera, bead n butter, caneu, Charlie’s Charmed, CJ Tennant, Daria Tittenberger, dconstruct, Debra Frances, Haley Alakan White, Helen Gair Millinery, Hello Darling, Johanna Brierley, Jonasie Faber, Lavinia van Heuvelen, Magpie Chiq, Margaret Jane Design, Mathew Nuqingaq, Meg Does Pottery, michinos, Rachael Kroeker, Shiny Raven Club, SOL Designs, Tinta by Masagana Flower Farm, Tricia Wasney Jewellery, and more!

For the complete look book of images from the runway show with captions of who made what, visit wag.ca/fashion anytime after 5pm on Thurs Nov 3, 2022.

A FASHION SHOW | NOV 2 | 7PM FEATURING 25 FALL/WINTER COLLECTIONS

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