Alootook Ipellie: Walking Both Sides of an Invisible Border. September 28, 2019 - January 5, 2020. Admission Applies. Alootook Ipellie (1951-2007) was born at Nuvuqquq on Baffin Island and grew up in Iqaluit before moving to Ottawa as a young man. He started working as a translator, illustrator and reporter for Inuit Monthly (renamed Inuit.. Walking Both Sides of an Invisible Border. Details. Details. Author . Ipellie, Alootook. Primary Genre Sub-Genre Issuance Form Language . English. Scholar Note Content Source . Canadian Writing Research Collaboratory. Identifier . tpatt:b74edff7-2136-483c-aa6f-04939fbab7a2.
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Walking Both Sides of an Invisible Border. 'Walking Both Sides of an Invisible Border' by Ipellie explores the tension of balancing Inuit roots with Western life. Home » Alootook Ipellie Poems. Alootook Ipellie was born in Nuvuqquq on Baffin Island and is remembered today as a graphic artist, translator, and cartoonist.. The title of the exhibit, Walking Both Sides of an Invisible Border, comes from one of Ipellie's poems, and Folger said he understands the challenge the poem speaks to about being planted in two.