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Unknown Maker, Inuit

Woman's Knife (Ulu)

Maker

Unknown Maker, Inuit

Culture

Inuit

Title

Woman's Knife (Ulu)

Year

ca. 1900

Medium

  • horn,
  • copper,
  • iron

Materials/Techniques

Techniques

  • horn,
  • copper,
  • iron

Materials

horn, iron, copper

Dimensions

15.6 cm (6 1/8 inches) (length) blade

Credit / Object Number

Credit

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Houston

Object Number

77.161

Type

  • Ethnology

Exhibition History

Form, Pattern, and Function
Design in American Indian Art
Dec 04, 1992 – Jan 24, 1993

Label copy

Forms of objects that had been determined by their function also changed across time and with the influence of European culture. Everyday objects such as the knife and dipper in this case are forms that seem to be based on the most efficient shape for their use. The dipper, of bent wood, lashed together and with a shaped bottom added, is a form that is common all over the Northwest Territories and Alaska, and is sometimes made out of skin in the same shape. The knife dates to the contact period and shows European influence in the traded metal knife blade, which replaced the old-style blade made out of flint. Eskimo women used sharp-bladed knives like these to flense the fat from sealskin before making the skins into garments. The same knife with a blunt blade was used to stretch skins before sewing.

Also shown are a pair of Eskimo snow goggles, a form worn by hunters for at least 2000 years. Made by a variety of groups in a similar form usually of wood, with slits to protect the eyes from glare, this pair is unusual in that the Iglulik hunter has taken advantage of the natural curve of the caribou antler to fashion his eye shade decorated with incised geometric forms.

Image use

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Public Domain This object is in the Public Domain and available under a CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication

Tombstone

Unknown Maker, Inuit
Woman's Knife (Ulu), ca. 1900
horn; copper; iron
15.6 cm (6 1/8 inches) (length) blade
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Houston 77.161

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