#Spencer Asah
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
spencer asah. asah dancing [plate 8], 1929.
0 notes
Photo
Decorative Sunday
The Nice, France-based decorative arts publisher C. Szwedzicki produced six titles on Native American Art. We’ve already presented their 2-volume portfolio Pueblo Indian Pottery, published from 1933-1936. This week we present some plates from the first of the six titles, Kiowa Indian Art, with images from the collection of Swedish-born American painter and Native American art curator Oscar Brousse Jacobson, published in 1929 in an edition of 750 copies signed by the publisher. The portfolio includes 30 color plates reproducing the paintings of the so-called Kiowa Six: Spencer Asah, James Auchiah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Monroe Tsatoke and Lois Smoky. The images shown here are by Asah, Hokeah, Mopope, and Smoky. Click on the images to see the attributions.
Oscar Jacobson was director of the University of Oklahoma's art department and established a special program at the school in 1926 for these promising Kiowa artists. They were provided with studio space, painting instruction, and choice exhibition venues, including the 1928 First International Art Exposition in Prague where they received international acclaim. This portfolio was produced soon after. The work of the Kiowa Six are considered significant in the development of Native American painting by bridging the era of Ledger Art to flat-style Southern Plains painting. Of the six, the work of Lois Smoky is the rarest and the most collectable as she left the program in 1927 and did not continue painting, although she later became noted as an accomplished beadworker.
View more posts on works published by C. Szwedzicki.
View other Decorative Sunday posts.
#Decorative Sunday#decorative arts#decorative plates#C. Szwedzicki#Kiowa Indian Art#Kiowa artists#Kiowa Six#Spencer Asah#James Auchiah#Jack Hokeah#Stephen Mopope#Monroe Tsatoke#Lois Smoky#Oscar Brousse Jacobson#Oscar Jacobson#Native Americans#Native American art#Native American artists
140 notes
·
View notes
Text
Art by Spencer Asah, Kiowa artist. One of the Kiowa 6, a group of infamous indigenous artists
#art#artists#liminalartist#artist#america#native american artists#native american art#nativeamericans#native people#native art#indigenous artist#indigenous art#indigenous#indigenous people#native american history#kiowa#kiowa 6
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
An Indigenous Presence: Cultural Survivance and Contemporary American Indian Art & Design
Museum exhibitions, especially those featuring cultural items, can sometimes give the impression of cultures or peoples frozen in time. Behind the scenes, however, CMNH is a flurry of active research and knowledge production. Work to link our collections and exhibitions to the present moment is vital.
As an art historian who studies modern and contemporary art, I often think about the connections over time and space between historic objects. Lately, I’ve been thinking about many of the American Indian belongings we have on display in Alcoa Hall, and contemporary art. This contemplation reveals the influence American Indian artists have exerted and continue to exert on the American art world.
In the early 20th century, Indian artists were instrumental in the formation of American modernism. Artists such as Awa Tsireh (San Ildefonso Pueblo), the members of the Kiowa Five (Spencer Asah, James Auchiah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Monroe Tsatoke and Lois Smoky), Angel De Cora (Ho-Chunk), and potter Maria Martinez (San Ildefonso Pueblo) influenced the growing trends of abstraction and patterning that defined modernist painting in the United States. These artists, along with other American Indian artists and artisans helped establish the US as a growing center of modernism in competition with Europe. Despite having their contributions and innovations undercut or co-opted by Euro-American artists and collectors, Native artists continued to produce artwork as acts of survivance. Survivance, a concept developed by cultural theorist Gerald Vizenor, is an expression of active presence. The term denotes a response to the attempted cultural and physical genocide of Native peoples in the United States that is beyond simple survival, but involves acts of resistance that declare a dynamic presence – often combining traditional ways of knowing with contemporary technologies that are specific to an individual or tribal affiliation.
Later in the century, Native artists continued to define the American art scene. Artists like Fritz Scholder (Luiseno), Kevin Red Star (Apsáalooke), Edgar Heap of Birds (Cheyanne and Arapaho), and Jaune Quick-to-See Smith (Salish) continued (and continue) to challenge the mythology of the Indian in American imaginary. These artists, whose creations have been collected and exhibited by major museums across the country, also view their art as a form of resistance. Their work can therefore be understood as acts of survivance.
Contemporary American Indian artists are still grappling with the politics of representation, regularly fighting stereotypes while also working to preserve the cultural knowledge that the settler state tried to destroy through forced assimilation. Because of these complicated and often violent histories, it is important that, most of us, as descendants of settlers, think critically about Native inspired designs in the objects or clothing we buy. Instead of coopting from indigenous cultures, shop from companies that employ Native designers. Better yet, buy directly from Native artists who are demonstrating how traditional knowledge and ways of making are thriving in the 21st century. Featured below are just a few of the artists whose work is connected to the cultural forms and belongings on display in Alcoa Hall. Many of them also have great items for sale on their websites – just in time to find some special holiday gifts!
Bunky Echo-Hawk. Image credit: Ryan Redcorn
Bunky Echo-Hawk (Pawnee and Yakima) is a painter and designer who has worked with companies such as Nike and Pendleton to design Plains Indian inspired products and fundraise for Native organizations. His eye-catching and exciting work plays with indigenizing popular culture and addressing environmental racism while reinterpreting Plains Indian oral history and record keeping traditions, like winter counts, through his live painting performances. To learn more about winter counts, visit the display in Alcoa Hall featuring the Carnegie Winter Count by Dr. Thomas Red Owl Haukaas. Echo-Hawk was also the subject of a recent episode of American Masters, the PBS documentary series. Check out his website to browse some of the great prints and stickers he has for sale.
Bethany Yellowtail
Bethany Yellowtail (Apsáalooke and Northern Cheyenne) is the brilliant designer behind B. Yellowtail, a fashion brand launched in 2015. Her work is intimately connected with her social justice work in Indian Country. Her website features indigenously designed goods as well as her own collections – inspired by Apsáalooke traditions, like elk tooth dresses and ribbon skirts. Her clothing functions as wearable art that demonstrates the power and resilience of Native women and matrilineal cultural systems. I’ve purchased some of their cloth face masks – the proceeds of which benefit Native communities suffering from COVID-19. I’m confident you’ll find something you love on B. Yellowtail’s website.
John Isiah Pepion (Blackfoot) understands the ceremonial importance of making artwork, including its healing power. Pepion’s paintings, drawings, and designs are inspired by traditional practices such as winter counts and ledger drawings. Ledger art dates to the 1850s, when ledger books became one of the primary materials available to Plains Indians, especially to those imprisoned in forts as prisoners of war during the 19th-century Indian wars, without access to traditional materials like bison hides. Pepion’s work in this medium serves as cultural preservation, keeping him and his artwork tied to Blackfoot history and to Blackfoot ancestral lands. His website features original artwork, prints, and all sorts of items with his designs including scarves, stationery, blankets, and jewelry.
Sage Protection Pin by Margaret Jacobs. Image credit: Taylor Robinson.
Margaret Jacobs (Akwesasne Mohawk) is a sculptor and jewelry designer who works primarily in steel and pewter. Her forms are primarily abstract, but the material represents not only strength and resistance, but also references the history of Mohawk iron workers, featured in Alcoa Hall. Her abstract forms play between the organic and man-made, connecting color and shape with storytelling and family histories. You can find her sculpture or jewelry, which truly functions as wearable art, on her website.
It is important to note that Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and much of Western Pennsylvania, is on the traditional lands and waterways of the Seneca, Lenape (Delaware), and the people we refer to as the Monongahela (their autonym is currently unknown). These lands and waters were also important to the Shawnee, Wyandotte, and Osage nations. These lands carry the histories of these people from before their forced removal and through their struggles and triumphs for survivance well into the present moment. To find out more about the Seneca Nation (including about Seneca artists) visit the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum or Ganondagan Seneca Art & Culture Center. To learn more about the Lenape, go to the Delaware Nation or the Delaware Tribe of Indians. Or visit the Museum of Indian Culture, in Allentown, PA.
Jessica Landau has a joint appointment as Assistant Curator of Anthropology and Archaeology at Carnegie Museum of Natural History and as a Lecturer in Curatorial Studies in the History of Art & Architecture at University of Pittsburgh. Museum employees are encouraged to blog about their unique experiences and knowledge gained from working at the museum.
91 notes
·
View notes
Photo
The beginning of Book 2 Scene 3 and Toph is ready to burn the world!
We must thank our awesome Patreon supporters of ASAH: StefanieSunshine, Cary Sawatsky, Ruby, rocketaxxon, Petra Leitgeb, Spencer Liles, Summer Clark, The Star Wars Battlefront Podcast and Shannon DuBois Sawatsky.
Thank you so much for your support! Help us get more pages out faster by supporting us, Killar&Syd, on Patron!
#toph beiphong#toph fanart#toph#burn_the_world#Avatar The Last Airbender#Avatar strife and harmony#avatar aang#Fanart#fanfiction#webcomic#Book Two
10 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Spencer Asah Self Portrait Dancing US (1929) [Source]
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
ART: "Self Portrait Dancing" - 1929 By Spencer Asah - Kiowa Five (1906 - 1954) Watercolor applied with pochoir Ledger drawing 89 x 72 cm. Kiowa artist Spencer Asah was born near Carnegie, Oklahoma and was the son of a Buffalo Medicine Man. Consequently the atmosphere that he grew up in was full of tribal legends and rituals, the influence of which is evident in his paintings. Spencer Asah also was a traditional singer and dancer and active in Oklahoma's powwow circuit. >>----> KIOWA FIVE ARTISTS The Kiowa Five, now increasingly known as the Kiowa Six, consisted of six individuals, Spencer Asah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Monroe Tsatoke, Lois Smoky, and James Auchiah. The Kiowa Five were a group of painters who earned national and international acclaim during the early twentieth century. Kiowa Field Matron Susie Peters gave Asah and other Kiowa youths art lessons while attending St. Patrick's Mission School near Anadarko and attended special art classes with other Kiowas at the University of Oklahoma during the late 1920s under the tutelage of professors Edith Mahier and Oscar Jacobson, director of the School of Art. >>----> CULTURE Kiowa Indians of North America Great Plains
Check us out
http://iloveancestry.com
#Art#Self Portrait Dancing#Spencer Asah#Kiowa Five Artist#Kiowa Artist#Kiowa tribe#native art#old art
0 notes
Text
Spencer Asah - An Amazing Kiowa Artist January 15, 1906 - May 5, 1954 Kiowa Artist Spencer Asah also known as Lallo (Little Boy) in his Kiowa language was born near Carnegie, Oklahoma. He was the son of a Buffalo Medicine Man. Consequently the atmosphere that he grew up in was full of tribal legends and rituals, the influence of which is evident in his paintings. Additionally, Spencer Asah was a traditional singer and dancer and active in Oklahoma's powwow circuit. Asah's father provided Spencer Asah extensive cultural information that he later used in his art. Asah attended St. Patrick's Indian Mission School in Anadarko, Oklahoma, where he received his first art instruction from Sister Olivia Taylor, a Choctaw nun. He was married to a Comanche, Ida, and had three children, Ola Mae, Ida L., and Kay, a son killed in 1953. As one of the famous early twentieth century Indian painters from Oklahoma, he used themes and images to present the culture of Kiowa dancers and images of Kiowa life. According to Oscar Jacobson, his mentor, his role as a descendant of distinguished medicine people was as custodian to important ceremonial items, including a Kiowa calendar. Asah's flat, two-dimensional work many times presents a profile view of a full figure. His line drawings and paintings were meticulous and exact replications of the feather work and regalia appropriate for the occasion. His dancers are animated and show movement and are accentuated with black and white areas that enhance the forms and colors of the dancers. Murals by Asah are found at the Oklahoma Supreme Court Building (formerly the Oklahoma Historical Society building) in Oklahoma City, at the Federal Building at Anadarko, Oklahoma, and at Fort Sill Indian School. >>----> KIOWA FIVE ARTISTS The Kiowa Five, now increasingly known as the Kiowa Six, consisted of six individuals, Spencer Asah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Monroe Tsatoke, Lois Smoky, and James Auchiah. The Kiowa Five were a group of painters who earned national and international acclaim during the early twentieth century. Kiowa Field Matron Susie Peters gave Asah and other Kiowa youths art lessons while attending St. Patrick's Mission School near Anadarko and attended special art classes with other Kiowas at the University of Oklahoma during the late 1920s under the tutelage of professors Edith Mahier and Oscar Jacobson, director of the School of Art. Spencer Asah is buried at Cache Creek Cemetery, Caddo County, Oklahoma, USA >>----> CULTURE Kiowa Indians of North America Great Plains Asah's work can be found in the following public art collections: :: Anadarko City Museum :: Denver Art Museum :: Gilcrease Museum :: Heard Museum :: Indian Arts and Crafts Board, US Dpt of the Interior :: Indian Arts and Crafts Board, Denman Collection :: The George Gustav Heye Center :: McNay Art Museum :: Museum of Northern Arizona :: Museum of Northern Arizona, Harvey Collection :: Museum of New Mexico :: Oklahoma Science and Art Foundation :: Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art :: Philbrook Museum of Art :: Southern Plains Indian Museum :: Woolaroc Museum
Stay informed about our work. Subscribe to I Love Ancestry eNews: http://eepurl.com/CLJan - Our strength lies in collective action. Join Us NOW!
Follow us @ https://www.facebook.com/iloveancestry https://www.youtube.com/iloveancestry https://twitter.com/LovingAncestry http://iloveancestry.tumblr.com http://pinterest.com/iloveancestry
Website http://www.iloveancestry.com
#american indian#native american#native american indian#Spencer Asah#Kiowa Artist#traditional singer#traditional dancer#NDN#NDNS#native#indian country
0 notes