The Southwest's arid climate has dictated lifeways for the region's inhabitants for thousands of years. The land, bountiful only with specialized knowledge, once sustained the ancestral Pueblo, Hohokam and Mogollon peoples and remains the source of Pueblo, Navajo, Apache and other tribal cultures today. Life is guided by conviction that one can coexist harmoniously with the supernatural, if things are done in the proper way. In return, Southwestern Indians have ensouled Mother Earth into their prayers, ceremonies and adornment-particularly their stunning and diverse range of jewelry. ![]() by Lois Sherr Dubin, Photography by Murrae Haynes | ||
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The Southwest's arid climate has dictated lifeways for the region's inhabitants for thousands of years. The land, bountiful only with specialized knowledge, once sustained the ancestral Pueblo, Hohokam and Mogollon peoples and remains the source of Pueblo, Navajo, Apache and other tribal cultures today. Life is guided by conviction that one can coexist harmoniously with the supernatural, if things are done in the proper way. In return, Southwestern Indians have ensouled Mother Earth into their prayers, ceremonies and adornment-particularly their stunning and diverse range of jewelry.
Regional Native culture, and specifically jewelry, has undergone significant changes over the centuries; even so, it has brilliantly maintained its most essential features in spite of the enormous number of acculturative changes. Materials, designs and spiritual connections, enriched over thousands of years, have experienced slow but continuous transformation, particularly over the past 50 years as the range of available materials and styles expanded dramatically. Join us now for an exploration of the evolution of Southwestern jewelry over the past five decades or so as seen through the work of Mary Coriz Lovato, Anthony Lovato and Jesse Monongye.
Mary Coriz Lovato and son Anthony Lovato, keeping the business in the family. Mary wears jewelry made by herself, and by her sons Harold (now deceased) and Anthony. Mary, born into the Corn Clan in 1936, blends traditional styles with some contemporary influences in her work. "My mother and mostly my father, Santiago Leo Coriz, were my teachers. I was brought up very traditionally. My father and grandfather [Valentino Coriz] rolled turquoise heishi. The grinding stone that he used is still here in the house. He didn't use no wheel or electricity. And they didn't have the shell mosaic jewelry, just strands of shell beads.
"I came up with the shell mosaic work myself. I started in the late '50s, in black, white and orange. Of course, way back, I did the plastic thing [using pieces of] batteries, combs [for materials] and then I went into shell. After going to a museum in Arizona and seeing the Hohokam jewelry, I bought a book, saw what they did, and started doing shell pendants and earrings a different way: I put in silver. These are contemporary. It's mainly what I see and what I think I should do, looking at things but not copying. "I like doing it because it was there for me to do. And it is the only way of looking after my family. But the main thing is what my dad said:'You do what you have to, what comes to you.' "Being really traditional, I like to keep that to myself and share it with other people in spirit. I'm praying for everybody-not for myself, but for the whole universe. I talk to my jewelry when I make it. I don't just make them to make them. After it's done, I say, whoever it may go to, may they have strength, may they have a good, happy life. So that is the way I do my work. "I am kind of slowing down with my jewelry," adds Mary. "So I'm going to stick with the main thing that I was brought up with and chose to do-the mosaic. But it won't be in the [large] batches that I used to do." Mary raised five sons to become accomplished silversmiths, including Anthony Lovato. "I'm so proud of Anthony and all my boys. They do their own work their own way. They don't copy each other. My dad told them, 'Do not copy.' I think they are keeping that in mind."
Anthony Lovato: Seeing Both Sides "My contemporary side is being part of the upcoming new artists, who-after high school-decided to go further and learn more techniques in metalsmithing, coloration, and two-and three-dimension[al] design. That's the reason I went after my fine arts degree at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, and why I feel that I'm in between the two [traditional and contemporary]-because I've seen both sides. My three main influences are sculptor Allan Houser, jeweler Charles Loloma and my grandfather, Leo Coriz. I learned from them and then went off on my own." Anthony resides physically and spiritually within the heart of Santo Domingo, generally acknowledged as the most conservative pueblo. He returned home in 1982 after living outside. "I have my studio right in the middle of the village because I feel that if I worked elsewhere, it would be a little bit harder to come up with my designs Our Indian religion is harmony, balance, well-being for the world, and peace. All the symbols go right into my work. I start carving in the stone mold; it just comes as I work-it flows right through. I've always said that we are just the tool for the creative spirit. I've always told people that's who we are as artists, and that good things take time." Anthony explains how he personally bridges the privacy of Santo Domingo religion while creating his reversible spirit pendant jewelry: "I have a limit, especially on my faces. On the spirit figure side, the stone or turquoise pieces that I use for the face make up the personality and coloration for each piece. I normally will not put eyes or mouth or facial stuff on my stones. Grandpa always told us that we do not make people. Whoever is upstairs makes people, makes their faces. But lately I've been going over to the realistic side and making faces. It's getting to the edge." Jesse Monongye: Pushing the Medium His life story is an epic tale. Abandoned as an infant, he was brought up traditionally on the Navajo reservation by distant relatives whom he calls "grandmother and grandfather." At age 21, while he was training for a career as a heavy equipment operator, Jesse began exploring jewelrymaking with his father, Preston Monongye (a Mission Indian of Mexican ancestry who was adopted by the Hopi). A year later, following a dream where he was encouraged by his mother (whom he's never found) to focus these talents, Jesse became a full-time jeweler and is, today, at age 49, a master goldsmith and one of the world's finest gemstone inlayers. He is equally proud that following years of alcoholism, he's had nearly 20 years of sobriety. "Not bad for a lost little Navajo sheepherder," remarks Jesse with a smile. A perfectionist who uses the very best in materials and strives to produce ever finer work, he notes, "This was instilled in me by my grandfather. Why do something wrong and then do it over again?" He frequently mentions the need to give back and is quite conscious of his responsibility to the younger generation. Two years ago, Jesse sponsored the Best of Show award at the annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair and Market to encourage younger, emerging artists. "I think that it is important to start talking to the young generation and tell them what success is all about. The only way you can make something beautiful is to stay in tune with your faith and yourself. You can never just say,'I'm going to pick up a stone and make something beautiful.'"
The Common Thread: A Profound Sense of the Spirit I also recall that time spent with Indian friends always includes much laughter. Suggests Anthony, "There always has to be humor and happiness within different people. It goes along with grief. Every time something [bad] happens, you have to be brought back up. That's why it's so important to have the humor in your life, because your happiness is a lot stronger than your sadness." American Indian peoples struggle to retain their identities and sacred beliefs despite enormous outside pressures. Native belief systems encourage wholeness of thought, rather than fragments of strife. Multiple realities emphasize balance and harmony: finding the middle ground. Sacred ways of knowing and living are keys that connect each of the award-winning artists portrayed here with the larger universe, and, in a sense, with each other. Their wonderful jewelry reflects that all parts of the world are powerfully charged and alive. Lois Sherr Dubin is the author of North American Indian Jewelry and Adornment from Prehistory to the Present (Harry N. Abrams, 1999). She is currently completing a book on Jesse Monongye, and curating exhibitions of Indian adornment to be held in New York, California and Vermont in 2002. Her latest article for Native Peoples was "Northwest Meets Southwest" (May/June 2001). | ||