Kigusiuq's family were relocated to Qamani’tuaq (Baker Lake)[3][4] She was married at the age of 11.[3]
In 1967, Kigusiuq began to draw to supplement her family's income after encouragement from her mother.[5]
Work
Kigusiuq's bright, bold and graphic work focused on camp life activities like hunting and fishing and supernatural forms inspired by Inuit spirituality and stories.[1] The source of these motifs are principally drawn from childhood experiences at the family camp, Kitikat in the Back River region.[6]
Throughout her career she experimented with many artistic mediums, including drawing, print, textiles, wall hangings. She adopted printmaking following the family's move to Baker Lake and between 1970 and 1988 she contributed to the Baker Lake print collections.[7]
In 1984, Kigusiuq delivered a copy of her mother's work Giver of Life to Pope John Paul II in Ottawa, Ontario as a gift from the Canadian Inuit.[5][8]
Her mature work saw the development of pencil crayon colour fields and collage techniques, the latter prompted by the onset of arthritis.[9]
^ abHeller, Jules; Heller, Nancy (1995). North American women artists of the twentieth century : a biographical dictionary. Routledge. ISBN9780824060497.
Sinclair, James. "Breaking New Ground: The Graphic Work of Shuvinai Ashoona, Janet Kigusiuq, Victoria Mamnguqsuuluk, and Annie Pootoogook". Inuit Art Quarterly. 19 (3/4: Fall/Winter 2004): 58–61.