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American Indian Art Broadens Its Horizon

July 15, 2009 by Marion Maneker

Credit: Matt Hinshaw/The Daily CourierPrescott, Arizona is the home to the Sharlot Hall museum and they recently held The Indian Art Market show where many of the artists were working in non-traditional media for their work. Here’s the Prescott Daily Courier‘s report:

More than a decade ago, Hopi artist Ramson Lomatewama broke the mold in the Native American arts community when he delved into glass-blowing. And yet despite pursuing a non-traditional medium, he did not abandon his cultural roots.

Today, Lomatewama creates conventional glass pieces such as bowls, vases and hummingbird feeders, but he incorporates the traditional Hopi cultural themes of nature and the spirit world into them – as well as Indian figurines – using myriad pieces of colored glass.

“As Hopis, our main vehicle for communicating is the use of color,” Lomatewama said Friday before the 12th annual Prescott Indian Art Market this weekend on the Sharlot Hall Museum’s plaza. “In Hopi culture, different colors symbolize different concepts or ideas.” […]

“There is a sector of the world that still believes Native American art should be pottery, porcupine quill work and flutes – what’s come to be stereotypical items,” he said. “It’s an awakening for some people. Once we explain to them all the ins and outs of glass art and Native American culture, then it seems to spark another way of looking at art and cultures in general.”

Artists Explore Traditional and New Media at Indian Market (Prescott Daily Courier)

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Filed Under: Art Fairs Tagged With: American Indian

About Marion Maneker

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