Every Paddle
Carries A Story.
Hand-carved Sugpiaq paddles by Benjamin Jacuk. Bridging ancestral knowledge and contemporary art.
The Tide is Coming
Cultural Significance
“This paddle carries the movement of the tides — not just in the ocean, but in the restoration of Sugpiaq identity.”
Benjamin Jacuk
An Alaska Native artist, researcher, and cultural educator, Benjamin Jacuk translates ancestral Sugpiaq knowledge into functional form. Each blade is a dialogue between the wood and the water it was meant to move.
He serves as Director of Indigenous Research at the Alaska Native Heritage Center, where his work bridges archive and living tradition.
The Craftsmanship
Carved from memory, shaped by hand.
Anatomy of a Tradition
Every curve serves a purpose, honed by thousands of years of kayaking the Aleutian chain.
Tapered for a silent entry into the water.
A central ridge sheds water silently with each stroke.
Sized exactly to the paddler's grip for long endurance.
Begin a
Conversation.
For museum acquisitions, private commissions, or educational inquiries regarding Sugpiaq watercraft.
studio@benjaminjacuk.com
Anchorage, Alaska