
While Native American artists have long been recognized as world-class
masters in such artistic media as textiles, jewelry and pottery, they
have only recently begun to take their rightful places among the ranks
of the world's great painters. Here we present a look at the work and
lives of four highly talented Native painters who deserve such
recognition: Michael Kabotie, Mateo Romero, Norma Howard and Mario
Martinez.
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Descended from the Hopi Snow Water clan atop Second Mesa, Michael Kabotie emerged in the late 1960s as an artist with a clear design vision. In the 1970s, he became a spokesman for an association of five Hopi painters called Artist Hopid, which still exists informally. "We, the Hopis, have a lot to offer from a spiritual standpoint and as a living force," he says, explaining the group's purpose. "We are hoping that from the presentation of our traditions and from the interpretations of the Hopi way in our art and paintings, a new direction can come for American spirituality."
Fred Kabotie also painted in a realistic style. Michael moved beyond this style to an abstract form incorporating strong symbolism. While Fred's paintings depicted Hopi ceremonies, Michael's paintings communicate the feelings, movements, prayers and spiritual meanings behind the ceremonies-prayers for rain, germination of seeds and purification.
Kabotie is deeply influenced by music, as seen especially in his "Chanting Series." Murals on the walls of Puebloan kivas reflect the chanting of sacred songs. While being fully initiated into Hopi spiritual societies, Kabotie also listens to Gregorian, Peruvian and Celtic chants as well as work by composers ranging from Beethoven to Jim Morrison and the Doors. "Their music searches from deep within for the inner spirit," he notes. He also sees parallels between Hopi philosophy and other world traditions. The Hopi artist has explored cross-cultural collaborations with Celtic artist Jack Dauben, and notes, "Hopi initiation is to find the spirit within and is similar to Buddhism. Our creator-destroyer stories of purification are like the tale of the Phoenix and stories in Hinduism." Kabotie and the Artist Hopid described their purpose as being part of a "spiritual healing movement." By looking back into their ancient roots, they discovered that their ancestors transformed fear into sacredness. "The Hopi word for fear (utí) and our word for sacred (utí he é) have connections. How do we respond to fear? This is what the Hopi sacred clowns are all about." Their comic parodies of social dysfunction promote harmony within Native communities. The opposite of the "Hopi Way" is koyaanisqatsi, meaning "life out of balance." Concludes Kabotie, "Finding the middle way is the essence of all spiritual movements and the essence of my art." Michael
Kabotie will show his work at the 2005 Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair
& Market. He can also be reached at his Flagstaff, Arizona, studio
at 928/734-5248 or online at www.kabotie.com.
Like Michael Kabotie, Romero comes from a Puebloan culture and shares a concern for contemporary Native American communities. Both artists were born into families with strong artistic traditions. Romero's father, Santiago Romero, was a student of the Dorothy Dunn studio program at the Santa Fe Indian School and exhibited his paintings in the important 1937 American Indian Exposition and Congress. Mateo's paternal grandmother, Teresita Chavez Romero, was a respected potter noted for her large storage jars and sitting figures, and she was one source of inspiration for Helen Cordero's beloved storyteller clay figures. Mateo's older brother, Diego Romero, also is a greatly talented and award-winning artist known mostly for his Mimbres-style and contemporary pottery. Though he now lives at San Juan Pueblo north of Santa Fe, Mateo was born and raised in Berkeley, California, studied at the San Francisco Academy of Art and earned a B.F.A. at Dartmouth College. He continued his fine art training at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe before completing a M.F.A. at the University of New Mexico. Mateo and Diego were dubbed "the Chongo Brothers" by their cousin, Mary Eunice Romero, a professor of education and curriculum at Arizona State University. Chongo literally means the bun hairdo of traditional Pueblo men, but the word further implies "joking playfulness." The term characterizes one side of their personalities: a wonderful sense of humor.
I was talking with Museum Director Duane Anderson when Romero arrived with a big smile and his youngest son, Rain Romero, bouncing atop his shoulders. We sat down at a large table in the Buchsbaum Gallery of Southwestern Pottery, and first Romero fondly recalled memories of his grandparents while reconstructing his family tree. He noted that his grandfather was a member of the Koshare sacred clown society, and then he pointed out some of his grandmother's pottery among the large ollas in the display cases. An occasional teacher as well, Romero recalled, "When I did a mural project with Cochiti youth, we brought the children here to the museum for a field trip. Many of them suddenly realized they were related to the women who made these pots in this room." Art connects Pueblo people to their families, and their families connect them to the art. Romero softened his voice when he revealed his traditional Keres name, He-tse-tewa, explaining its meaning as "war shield." Made from the hides of buffalo that once roamed the nearby Galisteo Plains, Pueblo men still carry these shields in special ceremonial dances. Old Pueblo war shields were said to protect their creators with an invisible force field of spiritual power, a fitting parallel to Romero's relationship to art. The
artist groups his mixed media works into two main themes: social
landscapes and dancers. The social landscapes are divided into four
main sub-themes: "Voices at Wounded Knee," "Bonnie & Clyde,"
"Indian Gaming" and "Addictions." He speaks proudly when acknowledging
that one of his paintings from the "Voices at Wounded Knee" series was
displayed for more than a decade at the Denver Airport. His "Bonnie
& Clyde" characters are dressed in squash blossom necklaces and
concha belts. One of his "Indian Gaming" paintings depicts a slot
machine with three Pueblo "Sun-faces" in a row. "Dancers" represent Romero's second primary theme, with the ceremonial figures emerging from darkness through the suffused mist bathed in golden sunlight. Italian Renaissance masters called these dramatic light-dark effects "chiaroscuro" and "sfumato." Innovated by Leonardo da Vinci, the techniques were developed in the Baroque period by Rembrandt and Vermeer. Romero achieves this dramatic effect by painting with asphalt, a most unusual artistic medium, illustrative of the daring drive this young man has to pursue his art wherever it leads him. Mateo
Romero will show his work at the 2005 Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair
& Market. He is represented by Blue Rain Gallery of Santa Fe and
Taos. His work can also be viewed at www.towa-artists.com.
Given the importance of family in her life, it is not surprising that her meticulous watercolor paintings predominantly portray scenes of her homeland, her family and the historic lifeways of her people. "My family worked hard for what they have," she explains. "And a person is judged on how they handle their hardship. It's important that you remember to take care of your family. My mother and father showed me how they loved me-by being home with the family. I'm also home every day, and I show my love to my family that way." Howard began drawing from her heart as a little child when her father bought her a box of crayons. "I didn't know what Indian art was when I was a kid," she says. "I started drawing on paper bags. I drew what I saw around me-sun, hills, flowers, water and houses." She also spent time with her grandmother, Lena Gibson Morris, whom they called Ipokni, a Choctaw basketmaker who wove plaited baskets from river cane. In 1903, Grandma Ipokni walked 500 miles from Mississippi to Oklahoma to homestead the land where Howard was born and raised. The artist speaks lovingly of her grandma's basketry. "Her favorite designs were diamonds, for diamondback rattlesnakes. Rattlesnakes are calm when undisturbed, but defend themselves when threatened." Ipokni's baskets were a source of inspiration for Howard, who later painted with "basketweave strokes," creating a unique style.
At the age of 21, Howard herself was sewing for a living-cowboy shirts in a clothing factory. "They said Hank Williams, Jr. used to wear our shirts. In 1994, the company shut down and moved to Mexico. I was out of work. I felt hurt. I was lost." Shortly thereafter, she had a dream and woke up in the middle of the night. "I heard my dad saying, 'You gotta paint!' My husband, David, said that was a good idea. I thought maybe I could put a little food on the table. I started painting little Indian kids." She sold a few pieces and kept painting steadily for a year. "In 1995, when I completed 34 paintings, I decided to show my work at the upcoming Red Earth Festival. My husband told everyone, and they put me on the front page of the paper. I was so embarrassed. I worried; what if I go back home without selling even one painting? On the way to the show, our car broke down. I told my husband, 'Let's just go home. It wasn't meant to be.' My husband said, 'We've come this far, we're going!' We entered one of my paintings in the competition. At the awards ceremony, they announced third prize, then second prize. Finally, they said the first-prize winner and called out my name! I was in tears. I sold all 34 of my paintings. That night we ate steak at the Golden Corral."
Yet, Howard has not forgotten her humble roots. She advises young Indian artists, "Paint and draw what you like, but never forget your family. Don't forget your ancestors' way of life, your dances, your songs and your stories. But if you do forget them, at least remember that you're still an Indian no matter what! For me, painting is my soul. The part of me that is shy sees beauty in the heart. I express it with my hands. I just wish my mother and father could have lived to see me make it in the art world." Norma
Howard will show her work at the 2005 Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair
& Market. She can be reached at her studio/home in Stigler,
Oklahoma, at 918/967-4314. Her work is also carried by Blue Rain
Gallery of Santa Fe and Taos.
Martinez believes it is important for abstract painters to first master figural and representational fine art techniques. When he was commissioned in 1999 by the city of Scottsdale to create a painting focusing on his Yaqui heritage, he chose to present a traditional Yaqui deer dancer as the primary subject matter. "I wanted to let my people see something about themselves," he explains. Yet, he also finds abstract art the perfect form to express other scenes and feelings that interest him. "The reason I became an abstract painter is because much of our ceremonial life in Arizona is not supposed to be photographed, painted or drawn," he says. "They are sacred, so you can't make any objects or sell any objects that have anything to do with particular ceremonies. So, I always had this knowledge that you couldn't do that and thereforethe only natural thing to do was to go towards abstraction. The challenge was to figure out something to say about yourself and your cultural information without violating that trust and what the elders before you have said not to do."
Shortly
after 2000, he moved to New York City and immersed himself in the
international art world. "The first year-and-a-half I saw more great
art-from the Renaissance to Postmodernism-than I had ever seen in my
life," he says. "I experienced the amazing intensity displayed by old
masters and the best of modern and contemporary artists. I painted in
both figural and abstract styles, gradually working my way up to large
canvases (7 by 12 feet)." In 2002, Martinez was chosen to be an Artist-in-Residence Fellow by the National Museum of the American Indian, a division of the Smithsonian Institution. As part of the fellowship, a selection of his paintings were posted online (www.conexus.si.edu). Now, his work will be included in a series of exhibitions at the George Gustav Heye Center in New York City titled New Tribe: New York. The series will feature retrospectives of three mid-career artists and a Native theater troupe. Martinez' exhibition will launch the series on January 29, and will remain on view through May 8. The Heard
Museum in Phoenix also has taken a special interest in Martinez,
commissioning him to create a 22-foot five-panel mixed-media work that
will hang outdoors. Its theme explores the artist's interpretation of
the Yaqui experience over the past century in Arizona. It will be
unveiled in May with the grand opening of the Heard's new signature
exhibition, HOME: Native Peoples in the Southwest. The
Rockwell Museum of Western Art in Corning, New York, also recognized
his important place in contemporary art by including one of his
paintings in their collection. Gregory Schaaf, Ph.D. (Cherokee) is the author of "The American Indian Art Series," featuring biographical profiles about almost 10,000 American Indian artists. He earned a doctorate in Native American history and a separate degree in art history from the University of California, Santa Barbara. After a distinguished career as a university professor of Native American Studies, he now serves as Director of the Center for Indigenous Arts & Cultures in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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