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- Identifying Marks: Tattoos and Expression - Anchorage Museum
Alaska is home to diverse cultures and tattooing traditions Inuit tattoo has been practiced in Alaska for millennia by Iñupiat and Yup’ik women Colonization suppressed traditional tattooing, but a new generation of Indigenous women are revitalizing and restoring the practice
- Kakiniit - Wikipedia
Kakiniit (Inuktitut: ᑲᑭᓐᓃᑦ [kɐ ki niːt]; sing kakiniq, ᑲᑭᓐᓂᖅ) are the traditional tattoos of the Inuit of the North American Arctic The practice is done almost exclusively among women, with women exclusively tattooing other women with the tattoos for various purposes
- What do the three lines on an Eskimo womans chin mean?
Many Indigenous tribes around the world have distinctive traditional facial tattoos—the Māori have Tā Moko, the Inuit have Kakiniit—but Gwich'in tattoos often appear as three distinctive lines on the chin, as well as lines on the cheeks or corners of the eye
- Face Tattoos in Indigenous Cultures: Meaning and History | PS . . .
Facial tattoos have a storied history and hold deep significance within Indigenous cultures Today, women are reclaiming the tradition on a larger scale
- Kakiniit: The art of Inuit tattooing - Canadian Geographic
Much like our knowledge that has seen us through thousands and thousands of years, some of our kakiniit — traditional Inuit tattoos — are still being passed down from generation to generation
- Tunniit: A guide to Inuit Tattoos in Greenland
The shape of the facial tattoos indicates to which group of Inuit one belongs, and they, therefore, vary in appearance among all Inuit groups The forehead and cheeks, in particular, are group tattoos The patterns had an amuletic intention, which was associated with a practice or with tools
- Eskimo - Tattoo Archive
Eskimo designs generally fall into two groups: Women usually have chin marks, which denote puberty and availability to be married Men's tattoos relate to hunting or war victories
- What Are Traditional Inuit Tattoos in Alaska, Canada, and . . .
Though “Iñupiaq” and “Yupik” are the comparable terms for Native Alaskans, the use of “Inuit tattoos” in this article reflects the language commonly used by Native tattoo artists throughout the Arctic region
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