April, 2026 First Friday w/ Tamara Burgh

April, 2026 First Friday w/ Tamara Burgh

From Artist Talks @ Bunnell by bunnellarts

April 8, 2026 · 29 min · Episode 133

About this episode

Tamara Burgh discusses her reinterpretation of Inupiaq stories from 'Alaskan Igloo Tales' through watercolor illustrations and printmaking.

“I discovered the book “Alaskan Igloo Tales” (c. 1974, illustrations by G. Agupuk) years ago while working in Nome, AK’s Indian Education Art and Culture Program. At that time, the stories in this book felt strange and distant from modern Native culture and experience. My self-studies in myth, history, Native cultures, and spirituality renewed my interest in the fascinating and inspiring stories in “Alaskan Igloo Tales.” I’ve chosen to visually reinterpret the book’s Inupiaq-identifying stories based on my new understanding, gained through studying Joseph Campbell’s mythic language and symbols. This project started with two residencies at IAIA in Santa Fe and continued with a residency at Makotaay Art Village in Taiwan. I’ve illustrated all thirty stories in watercolor. These watercolor sketches serve as composition and color studies for moku hanga, a Japanese woodblock-style printmaking process.” learn more.

People in this episode

Guest: Tamara Burgh

Topics covered

  • Native culture
  • mythology
  • illustration
  • art residencies
  • printmaking

Keywords

  • Alaskan Igloo Tales
  • Inupiaq
  • watercolor
  • moku hanga
  • Joseph Campbell
  • art residency
  • Native cultures

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: IAIA

Books & works: Alaskan Igloo Tales

Places: Santa Fe, Taiwan

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