Kingmeata Etidlooie
Kingmeata Etidlooie was an Inuk Canadian artist.
Name
Her name is also spelled Kingmeata, Kingmeeatta, Kingmeattar, Etidlui, and Etidloie.Early life
Born in Itinik Camp near Lake Harbour, Northwest Territories, Etidlooie spent the first half of her life living in camps on the south coast of Baffin Island.Art career
Etidlooie began her career as an artist in the late 1950s, when she focused on drawing and carving following the death of her first husband, Elijah. In the mid-1960s, she moved to the settlement of Cape Dorset. Following her move to Cape Dorset, she joined the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative along with her second husband, the graphic artist Etidlooie Etidlooie.Kingmeata is notable as an early West Baffin adopter of paint media, and her early drawings were noted for their painterly qualities by both Terry Ryan and K. M. Graham, who offered her watercolour and acrylic paint sets respectively. Between 1970 and 1989, she had more than fifty of her prints published, and she was known as an enthusiastic contributor to the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperatives painting studio following its establishment in 1976. Her children, Etulu Etidlui, Omalluq Oshutsiaq, Pukaluk Etungat, and Kellypalik Etidlooie, are sculptors.