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Girl Holding Kachina

Smithsonian American Art Museum and its Renwick Gallery

Object Details

Artist
Awa Tsireh, born San Ildefonso Pueblo, NM 1898-died San Ildefonso Pueblo, NM ca. 1955
Gallery Label
A kachina is a supernatural being important in the religion of the Hopi and Zuni. The kachina can be represented in physical form through masked ceremonial dancers and small figures known as kachina dolls, which are carved from wood and painted with bright earth pigments. During a kachina ceremony, the dolls are given to children as part of their religious training. It is customary to hang the dolls from roof beams so they they are constantly on view.
Exhibition Label
The paintings of Awa Tsireh (1898-1955), who was also known by his Spanish name, Alfonso Roybal, represent an encounter between the art traditions of native Pueblo peoples in the southwestern United States and the American modernist art style begun in New York in the early twentieth century. The son of distinguished potters, Awa Tsireh translated geometic pottery designs into stylized watercolors that feature the ceremonial dancers and practices of Pueblo communities. But Awa Tsireh's work is more than an amalgam of traditional and modernist design. At a time when the U.S. Office of Indian Affairs attempted to restrict Pueblo cultural and religious practices, the watercolors of Awa Tsireh and other Pueblo artists helped to affirm the importance of ceremonial dance and tirual to cultural survival.
Awa Tsireh's paintings quickly found an audience among the artists, writers, and archaeologists who descended on Santa Fe in great numbers in the late 1910s and 1920s. Painter John Sloan and poet Alice Corbin Henderson took a particular interest and arranged for his watercolors to be exhibited in New York, Chicago, and elsewhere. Henderson shared with the young Pueblo painter books on European and American modernism and Japanese woodblock prints, as well as South Asian miniatures and ancient Egyptian art that provided soure material for his stylized paintings. In this way, he redefined contemporary Pueblo art and created a new, pan-Pueblo style.
The paintings in this exhibition were donated to the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 1979 by the Hendersons' daughter, Alice H. Rossin.
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Corbin-Henderson Collection, gift of Alice H. Rossin
ca. 1925-1930
Object number
1979.144.43
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
Painting
Medium
watercolor and ink on paperboard
Dimensions
sheet: 11 1/8 x 6 in. (28.3 x 15.3 cm)
See more items in
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department
Graphic Arts
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Topic
Indian
Dress\Indian dress
Figure female\child\full length
Object\toy\doll
Record ID
saam_1979.144.43
Metadata Usage (text)
Not determined
GUID (Link to Original Record)
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk73f0ec721-5d18-4f0c-aa19-2c4effcebc58

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