Growing up the traditional life with hunting, gathering and shamans, she was the last of dozens of generations of Inuit, growing up in the traditional lifestyles enjoyed by the North American Inuit since before 1000 BC.
Marrying Ashoona, a hunter, in the Foxe Peninsula[?] of Baffin Island, they raised 12 children (or 17?), 10 of which survived past infancy. Ashoona the hunter then died at age 40, leaving her all alone with a handful of kids.
The Government Administrator and her cousin both inspired her to try her hand at drawing, then copper plates, a technique she didn't enjoy.
In the last two decades of her life, she assembled a collection of 7,000 images, 233 of which became prints in her Cape Dorset Collection. Her artwork focuses on both daily life and legends, or Taleelayu.
Her portrait was featured on a Canadian stamp in commemoration of International Woman's Day[?], and in 1977, she was awarded the Order of Canada, the highest possible honor for a Canadian civilian.
On May 28, 1983, Pitseolak Ashoona died in Cape Dorset, she was survived by an large family of artists, including:
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