Arts

Kablusiak on 2023 Sobey Art Award win: 'You dream about this stuff when you're an art school kid'

The Inuvialuk artist, who lives and works in Calgary, plans to invest the $100,000 prize in their practice — but first, a Costco shopping spree.

The Calgary-based artist plans to invest the $100,000 prize in their practice — but first, a Costco spree

Headshot of the artist Kablusiak. A black-and-white photo that's been tinted lavender. The artist, who uses they/them pronouns, has dark straight hair that's been cut into a mullet. They smile at the camera. Their chin is tattooed with four vertical lines and they wear earrings and facial piercings.
Kablusiak is the winner of the 2023 Sobey Art Award. The announcement was made Saturday, Nov. 18, in a celebration at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa. (Courtesy of the artist)

Kablusiak is the winner of the 2023 Sobey Art Award. The $100,000 prize is considered one of Canada's top honours in contemporary art, and after celebrating in Ottawa — where the prize was announced at the National Gallery of Canada — the Inuvialuk artist is already back home in Calgary, still processing the life-changing events of the weekend.

"I'm clearly so super emotional about it," said Kablusiak in a video call with CBC Arts, wiping away tears. "I'm a happy crier. That's my blessing and my curse."

"It was so surreal. You think about this stuff — you dream about this stuff — when you're an art school kid. But oh my god, this is real?! What the heck! [I have] so much gratitude." 

Kablusiak's art school days aren't all that far behind them. The 30-year-old artist, who uses they/them pronouns, was raised in Edmonton and currently lives and works in Calgary, where they earned a BFA from the Alberta University of the Arts in 2016. By 2019, they'd already attracted the attention of the Sobey Art Award; Kablusiak previously made the shortlist that year. 

Both then and now, their practice spans an eclectic range of mediums: photography, sculpture, drawing — even lingerie. It's work that explores contemporary life in the Inuit diaspora, while upending colonial stereotypes of what Inuit art should be: think soapstone sculptures of 7-Eleven candy and tampons; Ookpiks remixed with Garfield and Furby. As they told CBC Arts in June after making this year's shortlist: "I'm always hoping to either make someone laugh or cry — or hopefully both."  

Medium shot of the artist Kablusiak. They stand smiling in front of a black step-and-repeat wall branded by the 2023 Sobey Art Award.
Kablusiak attends the 2023 Sobey Art Award gala at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa. The Calgary-based artist is this year's grand winner. (Dave Chan/National Gallery of Canada)

In a statement, award jury chair Jonathan Shaughnessy said: "The 2023 Sobey Art Award jury felt compelled by Kablusiak's fearless and unapologetic practice that confounds old categories and art histories and points to new imaginaries. Their multidisciplinary vocabulary deploys the experience of being looked at without being seen that shapes Inuit and queer realities in both the art world and society at large." 

A jury of Canadian and international curators selected Kablusiak from a shortlist of five artists who each represent a different region of the country: Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill (West Coast and Yukon), Séamus Gallagher (Atlantic), Anahita Norouzi (Quebec) and Michèle Pearson Clarke (Ontario). Every nominee receives $25,000, and the prize is jointly administered by the Sobey Art Foundation and the National Gallery of Canada. 

Photo of eight furry sculptures arranged on a white plinth in a white wall gallery. They're all variations on Ookpiks, furry owl characters.
Kablusiak. Red Ookpik with Hat, Red Ookpik, Plucked Ookpik, Furby Ookpik and Garfield Ookpik, 2021-2023. Collection of Marnie Schreiber; Collection of Frank Griggs and Jeremy Laing; Courtesy of the artist and Norberg Hall, Calgary. © Kablusiak (National Gallery of Canada)

For three years in a row, the winner has repped the same region: Prairies and North. Winnipeg's Divya Mehra was the Sobey victor in 2022 and Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory (Iqaluit) won the prize in 2021. "Maybe it's the water," said Kablusiak, with a chuckle. In June, the artist told CBC Arts that if they won the Sobey, they'd be buying a house in Calgary — and Alberta is where they've definitively chosen to live and work. "The arts community here is so supportive," said Kablusiak, who keeps a studio at Calgary artist-run centre The Bows. "It would be hard to leave that behind."

According to Kablusiak, the $100,000 in prize money will give them the financial freedom to experiment more freely in their art practice. "I told my gallerist after the announcement that I wanted to go crazy at Costco," said Kablusiak. But joking aside, they're keen to try some big, new things — like creating a monumental bronze sculpture, for example. "I'm just excited to make work and to just keep going."

Since its founding in 2002, the Sobey Art Award has gone to artists including Annie Pootoogook (2006), Ursula Johnson (2017) and Stephanie Comilang (2019). A group exhibition featuring work by all of this year's nominees will be appearing at the National Gallery of Canada through March 3, 2024.

Photo of an art installation in a white-walled gallery. Visible: Walls covered with cut-outs, reminiscent of the eyes in a sheet-ghost Halloween costume. A video is screened on one partition in the middle of the room. The imagery is of counter covered with food. Text for a recipe appears overlaid on the image.
Kablusiak. Qiniqtuaq, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Norberg Hall, Calgary. Installation view of the Sobey Art Award exhibition, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. Oct. 13, 2023 to March 3, 2024. © Kablusiak (National Gallery of Canada)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Leah Collins

Senior Writer

Since 2015, Leah Collins has been senior writer at CBC Arts, covering Canadian visual art and digital culture in addition to producing CBC Arts’ weekly newsletter (Hi, Art!), which was nominated for a Digital Publishing Award in 2021. A graduate of Toronto Metropolitan University's journalism school (formerly Ryerson), Leah covered music and celebrity for Postmedia before arriving at CBC.

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