#JauneQuick-To-SeeSmith
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
lisablasstudio · 1 year ago
Text
Monday's image: September 25, 2023
Jaune Quick-To-See Smith, State Names, Oil, collage and mixed media on canvas, 48 x 72 inches, 2000, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.
#mc_embed_signup{background:#fff; false;clear:left; font:14px Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; width: 600px;} /* Add your own Mailchimp form style overrides in your site stylesheet or in this style block. We recommend moving this block and the preceding CSS link to the HEAD of your HTML file. */
Subscribe to Monday's image
* indicates required
Email Address *
(function($) {window.fnames = new Array(); window.ftypes = new Array();fnames[0]='EMAIL';ftypes[0]='email';fnames[1]='FNAME';ftypes[1]='text';fnames[2]='LNAME';ftypes[2]='text';fnames[3]='ADDRESS';ftypes[3]='address';fnames[4]='PHONE';ftypes[4]='phone';}(jQuery));var $mcj = jQuery.noConflict(true);
0 notes
artsfemin · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Born 1940 in the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Indian Reservation in Montana, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith is one of the most influential North American indigenous artists. Abandoned by her mother at the age of two, she lived in various cities and reserves in California and Washington. Having studied in several universities, she holds four honorary doctorates, among other degrees. Since the 1970s, she has developed a practice of abstract painting and lithographs, based on complex networks of lines and colours. The use of glued mixed materials, such as newspaper, creates surfaces with rich and complex textures. The combination of commercial slogans, layers of text, scribbled drawings and paint drippings, as well as objects integrated into installations, make these abstract works hybrid and complex realisations, which nonetheless include figurative motifs. Her work, present in various prestigious collections, has been the subject of more than one hundred solo exhibitions, and has won her the Joan Mitchell prize. Notably through overlays and collages, she mixes Indian traditions with American modernity, giving her work a political discourse on the subject of cultural appropriation. She describes herself as a “cultural art worker.” Her works bring into play various elements linked to tribal art as well as environmental concerns. In Flathead Vest: Father and Child (1996), a traditional vest is painted onto an ensemble of images: floral motifs, a 19th century photograph of an Indian father and son, as well as a text about food additives. This confrontation recurs in her other pieces, particularly in several of her lithographs: Winds of Change (1992) combines images of teepees, horses and geometric symbols with that of  trucks and planes, all brands of contemporary society that contradict the traditional world of indigenous reserves. #JauneQuick-to-SeeSmith #americanfemaleartist #indianfemaleartist #femalepainter #femalelithographer #montana #americnaindian #mariondaniel #katiaporro https://www.instagram.com/p/CFyu1ptHPTk/?igshid=1qr07culx6nuv
0 notes