Among the many games played by the Inuit, there were two whose pieces required the skill of the carver. One was a version of the pin and cup game, called ayagak. Players would flip a dangling pin into the holes of a perforated object, which was sometimes made in the shape of a bear. The other was tingmiujang, meaning “images of birds.” This was a game of chance similar to dice. A set of about fifteen game pieces in the shape of birds and human beings were shaken in the hands and thrown upward. Upon falling, those pieces that happened to stand upright would be taken by the player whom they faced. The players would take turns throwing until the last figure was claimed, the winner being the one with the greatest number of figures.
The present game piece, carved from walrus ivory, takes the form of an abstract bird in miniature, measuring just under one inch tall. Its triangular body, sweeping back from a stylized, featureless head, rests on a flat base that enabled the figure to stand upright for the purposes of the game. The ivory is mottled with age and smoothed with wear, suggesting this piece had a long history entertaining its owners. A hole is found at the tail of the figure, which may have allowed the many pieces of the set to be strung together and organized on a cord.
In good condition. Small crack near tail.
Seward Kennedy (1925 - 2015) New York and London