Scrimshaw FAQs
Is Ivory Legal to Use for Scrimshaw?
There are several types of ivory favored by contemporary scrimshaw artists that are legally available as raw material. At the Russian American Company, we are featuring now mostly scrimshaw on fossil ivory, either woolly-mammoth ivory at least 12,000 years old; or fossil walrus tusks unearthed in the mud and sands of the north Alaska coasts on native Alaska tribal lands, as ancient ivory is “found” and fossilized over thousands of years, and thus deemed legal ivory. Only ethnic native first-nations artists can continue to produce contemporary scrimshaw on "fresh" or new ivory, as a special exception of the Marine Mammal protection act allows them this cultural right. Keep in mind that northern Alaska first-nations tribes are continuing to subsistence hunt the walrus for food, as they have done for over 2,000 years; and this tradition includes utilizing every part of the animal, including creating art as well as practical implements out of the ivory tusks. So Alaska natives can scrimshaw new ivory, but all other scrimshanders must do their work on legal fossilized ivories, bone, or antler.
How is Scrimshaw Made?
The art of scrimshaw is painstaking and very labor intensive. The first step is preparing the surface to be etched by fine sanding and polishing, in fossil ivories usually down through the outside layers that have been colored and stained by the minerals in the soil where the old ivory laid for thousands of years. Once through the "bark" of a tusk or fragment of fossil ivory, the creamy white surface is revealed and prepared. Next, the scrimshaw artist must coat the ivory with a black temporary layer of ink, which allows the etching with a fine point steel hand tool or heavy needle to come out in white relief. The lines are actually etched or carved into the surface; and when the scene is finished, then the temporary black ink is removed, and a final inking is done with a permanent black ink, or even many colored inks for the best colored scrimshaw. This traditional technique takes many many labor hours, and the best scrimshaw artists, like the best of any producers of fine art, can command a price for their works accordingly. It is now possible to create "faux" scrimshaw using lasers and machines; and most of the lower priced "souvenir" scrimshaw is produced that way; but only true hand-scrimshaw is considered authentic.
The History of Scrimshaw in Alaska
Although American whalers brought modern scrimshaw to Alaska, there was already an ancient culture of scrimshaw-like art throughout Alaskan tribal history. Looking back to ancient native cultures such as the pre-historic Alaska and Siberian Punik tribes, they were known to decorate and etch their ivory with art, cultural decorations, and even etched their ivory spear and arrow points with what could be defined as primitive scrimshaw. Once the whalers arrived, the sailors had months at sea, sometimes even entrapped in the arctic ice over the winters, where they used ivory from whales teeth, or walrus ivory traded with the northern Yupik, to create fine detailed inked etchings of different scenes. The art has always best been created on ivory, but also bone and antler are good mediums for scrimshaw art.
The Scrimshaw Artists and Their Products
The Russian American Company represents not only today's best Alaskan scrimshanders, such as Dennis Simms and George Vuxon plus other recognized native and non-native Alaskans working in ivory and bone, but also feature some of the best producers of hand-scrimshaw from the lower forty-eight states. Artists like Gary Dorning, David Adams, EV Wick, or Paul Logan, who's works are featured in some of the finest scrimshaw collections worldwide, also grace the cases of our gallery with their museum-quality works. Individual collectors pieces, whole scrimshawed fossil ivory tusks, scrimshaw designer jewelry set in sterling silver, or even scrimshawed custom ivory knife handles can be found in our store. Some of the finest detail scrimshaw is now being done on Alaskan raw materials: we offer rare and unusual pieces and whole fossil walrus tusks with beautiful colored hand scrimshaw or traditional black-inked tusks, or scrimshawed jewelry, scrimshawed knife handles, and even rarer whole mammoth tusks unearthed in Alaska and scrimmed by Alaskan artists that are unique works of this ancient art.
Specialty Scrimshaw Collection Available at the Russian American Company in Sitka, Alaska
Please think of the Russian American Company as purveyors of some of the finest authentic scrimshaw, by the finest of Alaskan and American contemporary scrimshanders. Whether it is an addition to your museum quality scrimshaw collection, or a unique gift for a loved one, our stores have the finest available anywhere in Alaska.