Authenticity of Eskimo Inuit Art & Native Indian Art

Written by Clint Leung


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The obvious fakes can be spotted quite easily. An imitation of an Inuit Eskimo art carving spotted at a gift shop was not made of stone as it was not cold torepparttar touch. It was very light in weight unlike a stone which has some mass to it. The detail andrepparttar 133897 bottom ofrepparttar 133898 piece hadrepparttar 133899 molded look to it. There was even a sticker onrepparttar 133900 bottom withrepparttar 133901 company name Wolf Originals. Side by side comparisons of similar pieces inrepparttar 133902 souvenir store revealed that they were all identical in every detail, which is impossible for original artwork.

A black totem pole had a very flat uniform back and bottom again giving awayrepparttar 133903 fact that it came from a mold. Other totem poles made from wood or mixed wood with a claim that they were hand painted were among many similar pieces inrepparttar 133904 store. All of these examples were each priced less than $20 Canadian which was another indicator that they were not original artwork.

Imitations of Inuit Eskimo art sculptures were recently spotted for sale in shops located at major Canadian airports. From a distance, these Inuit Eskimo art sculptures of hunters, polar bears and Inuit women with children looked very authentic. However, each piece had several identical copies onrepparttar 133905 same shelf.

To avoid accidentally buying a fake or imitation, it is suggested that consumers buy Inuit Eskimo art and Native American art from only reputable galleries and dealers rather than from tourist souvenir shops. A piece of original, authentic Inuit Eskimo art or Native American art is one of a kind. There should be no other identical pieces onrepparttar 133906 shelves. In addition, original Inuit Eskimo art carvings should come with an Igloo tag (or sticker) which is a Canadian government registered trademark. Inuit Eskimo art carvings that are certified byrepparttar 133907 Canadian government to be handmade by Inuit artisans, come with Igloo tags.

Clint Leung is owner of Free Spirit Gallery (http://www.FreeSpiritGallery.ca), an online gallery specializing in Inuit and Northwest Native art including carvings, sculpture and prints. Free Spirit Gallery has numerous information resource articles with photos of authentic Inuit and Native art as well as free eCards.


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Written by Nedyalka Markova


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