Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Museum of Inuit Art

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Established
  
June 2007 (2007-06)

Director
  
David Harris

Address
  
Toronto, ON, Canada

Phone
  
+1 416-640-1571

Type
  
Inuit art

Public transit access
  
509

Province
  
Ontario

Museum of Inuit Art

Dissolved
  
May 29, 2016 (2016-05-29)

Location
  
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Similar
  
CBC Museum, Textile Museum of Canada, Gardiner Museum, Mackenzie House, Museum of Contemporary Canadian

The Museum of Inuit Art, also known as MIA, was a museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada located within the Queen's Quay Terminal at the Harbourfront Centre. It was devoted exclusively to Inuit art and culture.

Contents

The museum closed on May 29, 2016. This followed a decline in visitors and revenue following two summers of construction activity along Queens Quay West, which caused the temporary closure of streetcar access to the area of the museum.

Officially opened in June 2007, the museum existed due to the efforts of David Harris — a former teacher in Nunavut and founder of The Harris Inuit Gallery, a respected commercial gallery for Inuit art — and a group of dedicated partners.

MIA occupied more than 6,000 square feet (560 m2) of exhibition space and was home to hundreds of pieces of Inuit art ranging from sculptures carved from stone, antler, ivory and bone to ceramics, prints and wall hangings.

Architecture

The MIA space was designed by gh3 inc. and has won two design awards: the Ontario Association of Architects Design Excellence Award, and the Canada Interiors’ Best of Canada Design Competition Award. “The interior of the museum was designed to remove visitors from the commercial clutter of the adjacent downtown shopping arcade and transport them to a more rarefied environment for viewing art — a neutral white shell evoking the iconic landscape forms of the arctic ice.”

Collection

Sprott

MIA acquired significant works through the generous sponsorship of Eric Sprott and the Sprott Acquisition Program in 2008.

MIA owned and operated a 1,800 sq ft (170 m2) gallery featuring collector quality, original works of art created by contemporary Inuit artists. As a non-profit institution, all proceeds from the Museum of Inuit Art and the Museum of Inuit Art Gallery support cultural, educational and acquisition programs at the museum.

The sculptures, wall hangings, and original fine art prints on sale at MIA Gallery and Graphics Gallery were acquired from the various Inuit co-operatives that represent Inuit artists working in the North. As such, all proceeds from the sale of art at the gallery directly supported the work of contemporary Inuit artists and their communities. The shop also carried jewellery, packing dolls, and books on Inuit art.

Reciprocal partnerships

MIA was a reciprocal admissions partner with the Bata Shoe Museum, Design Exchange, and the Gardiner Museum.

Affiliations

MIA was affiliated with: CMA, CHIN, and Virtual Museum of Canada.

References

Museum of Inuit Art Wikipedia