
One of the most distinctive talents in circumpolar art, Karoo Ashevak’s body of work has had an outsized impact for a career that lasted only five years. His untimely death in a fire at the age of 34 brought an abrupt end to a surge of creative output that continues to draw interest and admiration from both Canadian and international art collectors.
Born in the Canadian high north of Taloyoak (Spence Bay), Karoo developed a style that fused his unique vision of dreams, spirituality, and shamanism with the distinctive raw material available to him in Taloyoak. Karoo chose the material for his sculptures carefully. The artist benefited from a relative abundance of time-cured whalebone left in deposits on the land by 19th century whalers, and also in ancient middens and dwelling sites long pre-dating Europeans arrival in the Arctic.[1]
A work of exceptional balance and proportion, Drum Dancer is among the great sculptures by Karoo. The arching body of the figure captured in the confines of the whalebone evokes the swaying motion of the dancer. The face of the figure is realized with exceptional clarity distinctive to a handful of works from Karoo’s mature period. Drum Dander epitomizes the wild and exuberant presence so associated with Karoo’s creations, and for which the artist himself is remembered by those who knew him. [2]
Acquired by dedicated collector and influential advocate of Inuit art Dr. Norman Epstein, in 1983 from the Inuit Gallery of Vancouver, Drum Dancer was from the outset a key work in his important collection. Although Dr. Epstein owned at least four sculptures by Karoo over his more than sixty years collecting, Drum Dancer was the one work by the artist which Dr. Epstein kept close since its initial acquisition. An exception was made only in 1986, when the work was lent for the small but influential Inuit art exhibition at the Koffler Gallery, Toronto, The Spirit of the Land. Drum Dancer was published on the cover of the catalogue for the exhibition.
About the Collector
Among the first generation of passionate Canadian collectors of Inuit sculpture, Dr. Norman Epstein acquired his first artwork from the Canadian Guild of Crafts Shop in Montreal in 1956. He would go on to purchase important Inuit artwork guided by pioneering figures in the Canadian art scene including Avrom Isaacs, Harold Seidelman, and M.F. (Budd) Feheley. Dr. Epstein however remained true to his own sensibilities and personal preferences, building a varied collection around themes such as mothers and children, miniature ivories, and depictions of bears. Notably his collection was almost solely composed of sculpture, preferring the medium’s “tactility” and “spiritual warmth” over Inuit graphics.
Exhibiting artworks at his offices for the enjoyment of his patients, Dr. Epstein also actively lent to several provincial and national exhibitions. Part of a firm conviction for Dr. Epstein about the cultural value of his chosen collecting field, he stated plainly in a 1990 interview with Inuit Art Quarterly, “Inuit art is a Canadian heritage”.
By the 1990s, Dr. Epstein was making fewer changes to his collection. While often shared with the public, the collection was also deeply personal for him, treasured through its many iterations over 60 years. Dr. Epstein notes of his sculptures at the close of the article, “I love them so much, which may be a sickness for which there is no cure”.
[1] Pamela Harris, Karoo Ashevak Spirits (New York: American Indian Arts Center, 1973), unpaged.
[2] Ibid; Jean Blodgett, Karoo Ashevak (Winnipeg: The Winnipeg Art Gallery, 1977), unpaged; Personal correspondence of the author with former residents of Taloyoak
About the auction:
Featuring artworks from the pioneering collection of Dr. Norman Epstein alongside selections from the Lavrov-Costakis collection of historical art, highlights from our Major Spring Auction of Inuit Art include significant works by Karoo Ashevak, Pauta Saila, Augustin Anaittuq, Nuna Parr, Tudlik, Kenojuak Ashevak, David Ruben Piqtoukun, John Tiktak, Davie Atchealak, Pierre Karlik, and other notable artists, as well an important collection of ancient Arctic ivories.
Please contact us for more information.
Bidding is available May 14 – May 28, 2026.
On view at our Toronto gallery:
Wednesday, May 20 from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Thursday, May 21 from 10:00 am to 7:00 pm
Friday, May 22 from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Saturday, May 23 from 12:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Sunday, May 24 from 12:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Monday, May 25 from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Tuesday, May 26 from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Wednesday, May 27 from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Or by appointment.
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Meet the Specialists
Palmer Jarvis
Senior Specialist
Elizabeth Gagnon
Consignment Specialist
