Sculpting Ivory (2 of 17): Meet Artist Jerome Saclamana
Walrus ivory is a precious sculptural material that for millennia has been carved into a nearly endless variety of forms essential to Arctic life, from harpoon heads to needle cases, handles, ornaments, buckles and many more. Naturalistic and stylized figures of animals and humans were made as charms, amulets and ancestral representations. Carvers today bring this conceptual heritage to new types of work. During a week-long residency organized by the Arctic Studies Center at the Anchorage Museum in 2015, Alaska Native carvers Jerome Saclamana (Iñupiaq), Clifford Apatiki (St. Lawrence Island Yupik) and Levi Tetpon (Iñupiaq) studied historic ivory pieces from the Smithsonian’s Living Our Cultures exhibition and Anchorage Museum collection, and demonstrated how to process, design and shape walrus ivory into artwork. Art students, museum conservators, school groups, local artists and museum visitors participated throughout the week. Also, a two-day community workshop in Nome was taught by Jerome Saclamana and hosted by the Nome-Beltz High School. The educational videos presented here introduce the artists and document the materials, tools and techniques they use to make ivory artwork. To learn more about Alaska Native cultures, please visit the exhibition website Sharing Knowledge at http://alaska.si.edu, where you can also find educational materials in the Resources section.

Sculpting Ivory (3 of 17): Meet Artist Levi Tetpon

Sculpting Ivory (13 of 17): Shaping Ivory with Hand Tools

know how to tell if it's ivory or bone

What it Means to Be an Artist | David Best | TEDxSonomaCounty

The Bad Dürrenberg shaman: a summary | Archäologie exklusiv

How to Identify Ivory: Master Carver Brian Stockman's Expert Guide

Ivory carvings showcased in Anchorage Museum collection

What Medieval People Ate When Traveling

Mammoth Ivory: Cutting out the Blocks for My Knives

Ed Honyestewa Interview (Hopi Kachina and Sculpture Carving)

Sculpting Ivory (17 of 17): Whale's Tail Project

Nobody Breaks Celebrities Like Rowan Atkinson

🇨🇳 Ivory carving in China at risk after ban enforced

Alaska Native artists share the importance art in their culture

Is it Ivory or Bone? (I’ll show you how to tell) by David Harper

Ivory Jewelry: How to Identify & Examples Plus Lookalikes Celluloid, Lucite, Bone

Sculpting Ivory (1 of 17): Introduction

Reclaiming A 60 Year Old Persian Rug Buried Under Rotten Fruit For Years

Archaic Hunting Technology

