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Passionate Journey: The
Grice Collection of Native American Art
July 18 - October17, 2009
The depth and breadth
of modern Native American art is featured in Passionate Journey: The
Grice Collection of Native American Art. From Alaska to Guatemala, the
exhibition highlights personal expressions in ceramics, basketry, textiles
and performance masks. These distinctive works are the outward expressions
of personal and religious ideologies, commentaries on social and political
conditions, and the material manifestation of cultural survival.
Nelson and Gretchen Grice have been supporting The Mint
Museum for many years through donations of Native American artworks. The
Grice collection features contemporary Native American pottery primarily
from the Southwest; Native American basketry from the Southwest to Alaska;
modern Maya textiles from Guatemala and Mexico; and performance masks from
West Mexico.
The Grice Collection complements The Mint Museum's outstanding
ancient American art collection and bridges the historical gap between contemporary
Native American cultures and the Ancient American period, as well as, complementing
the costume and North Carolina pottery collections by providing an opportunity
to appreciate the differences of the differing traditions and to inspire
local artists, which was the Grices' original intent when choosing The Mint
Museum as the home for these artworks.
The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color catalogue
documenting the artistic traditions presented in the Grice collection. The
book's chapters discuss each artistic tradition and place the works within
the broader cultural context in which the artworks were created. (right:
front cover of Passionate Journey: The Grice Collection of Native American
Art. Image courtesy of The Mint Museum.)
Passionate Journey: The Grice Collection of Native American
Art is organized by The Mint Museum.
Wall panels and object labels from the exhibition
- Introductory wall panel
-
- Gretchen and Nelson Grice, formerly of Winston-Salem, North Carolina,
have been intrigued by the arts of the Native peoples of our hemisphere
for many years. Their collecting voyages took them to the U.S. Southwest,
Mexico and Guatemala. Gretchen favored the textile and basketry arts whereas
Nelson preferred ceramics and performance masks. They chose the Mint Museum
as the permanent home for their collection to share with the people of
North Carolina these artistic expressions from other American cultures
that complement the museum's holdings in these media and create a bridge
between the ancient Americas collection and the contemporary arts of their
descendents in Guatemala, Mexico, the United States and Canada.
-
- [CERAMICS SECTION INTRODUCTORY WALL TEXT PANEL]
-
- The Shape of Life: Contemporary Native American Ceramics
-
- Contemporary Native American ceramics constitute an on-going dialogue
concerning the past, present and future, embracing personal expression
and cultural essence. These works and the underlying creative processes
revitalize the individual, strengthen the community and ensure the future
for Native peoples. The compassion, vision and spiritual energies embedded
within these creations, made of Clay Mother, speak also to the world at
large, conveying delight, inspiration and introspection, which is the ultimate
goal of all noble works of art.
-
- Pueblo artists of New Mexico perceive the forming of the vessel and
its painting process as pious acts of prayer seeking spiritual energy,
divine guidance and universal equilibrium. The vessels' stunning geometric
designs or deep, monochromatic surfaces are more than decoration; they
are personal supplications for spiritual well being and universal balance.
-
- All vessels in the exhibit are hand-built without the use of the potter's
wheel. Most Native artists mine the clay and prepare the pastes and slips
(pottery paints) using local clays and coloring agents (plants and minerals).
Firing is typically done in open fires and not in kilns.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [CASE 1 NEXT TO SECTION INTRODUCTORY WALL TEXT]
-
- Lonnie Vigil. Nambe, 1949-
- Modified Seed Jar circa late 1980s
- Micaceous earthenware
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.16
-
- The firing of a vessel is integral to the creative process for Lonnie
Vigil, the sinuous fire clouds on this jar echoing the rising flames and
smoke clouds of the transformative fire.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [CASE 2 TEXT PANEL]
- Ancient Ceramic Traditions and Modern Expression
-
- Contemporary Native American pottery links past, present and future.
Its traditions are rooted in the earliest centuries of village life among
the Ancestral Pueblo people (previously known as the Anasazi) (circa 200-800
C.E.), culminating in the magnificent Mimbres culture (800-1150 C.E.) renowned
for its monumental architecture in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico and its finely
painted ceramics.
-
- ----
-
- Corrugated Ware Jar 200-1200 C.E.
- Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi)
- Earthenware
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.95
-
- ----
-
- Adrian Trujillo. Acoma, life dates unknown
- Jar late 20th century
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.5
-
- This high-shouldered jar, with cloud, feather, mountain sheep and deer
motifs, recalls ancient Mimbres pottery with its dramatic black-on-white
painted designs. By filling the background with geometric forms created
by tiny, parallel lines, Trujillo invokes the decorative surface effect
of ancient Corrugated Ware.
-
- ---
-
- Ergil Vallo (Dalawpi, 'Colors of the Rainbow'). Acoma, 1959-
- Seed Jar 1989
- Earthenware with slip paint, incising
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.3
-
- The indentations on the jar's shoulder resemble ancient Corrugated
Ware whereas the incised imagery is inspired by fine-line slip painting
found on ancient and modern Pueblo ceramics.
-
- ----
-
- Delores Histia. Acoma, life dates unknown
- Jar circa 1950s
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.55
-
- Delores Histia, among the foremost modern Pueblo pottery artists, pushes
the boundaries of form and decoration, particularly notable here in the
asymmetrical patterning of motifs based on traditional Acoma symbols of
clouds, hanging feathers that evince rain, and the prayer bow (t´ewusu).
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- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [SECTION WALL TEXT PANEL]
-
- The Rio Grande Valley Pueblos
-
- New Mexico's Rio Grande River Valley is home to pueblos distinguished
by ceramic traditions with varying degrees of artistic innovation or adherence
to classical forms. Geography divides them into the northern traditions
(Santa Clara, San Ildefonso, and Nambe), the middle traditions found south
of Santa Fe (Cochiti, Santo Domingo, San Felipe, Sandia and Isleta), and
those of the Jemez River Valley, a northwestern tributary (Santa Ana, Zia
and Jemez). Independent yet interrelated, these pueblos are renowned for
diverse creativity in ceramics and other media.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [CASE 3 - SUBSECTION CASE PANEL]
-
- The Northern Rio Grande Pottery Traditions: Santa Clara, San Ildefonso,
and Nambe Pueblos
-
- The pueblos north of Santa Fe traditionally made red- or black-slipped
pottery for domestic use. Yet pottery making waned during the early 1900s,
but was revived by the growing tourist trade. Led by San Ildefonso ceramists
Maria Martinez (potter) and Julian Martinez (painter) who pioneered the
now-famous, matte-black on polished-black style, today's northern pueblo
artists, especially those of Santa Clara and Nambe, are famous for innovative
artists who create stunning expressions in clay.
-
- ---
-
- Blue Corn. San Ildefonso, 1921-1999
- Bowl circa 1973
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2003.114.7
-
- Eagle feathers, created by burnished and unburnished surfaces, adorn
this bowl, by Blue Corn, one of the premier San Ildefonso artists.
-
- ---
- Anita Suazo. Santa Clara, 1947-
- Squash Jar circa 1990s
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.10
-
- Anita Suazo's dramatic jars echo her mother Belén Tapia's famous
squash-shaped vessels. Yet Anita's remarkable forms transcend naturalism
as modernistic, personal expressions of shape and aesthetic sensitivity.
-
- ---
-
- Tina Garcia. Santa Clara, 1957-2005
- Low-necked Jar 1996
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.69
-
- Tina García is renowned for her high polished surfaces and has
been called the finest polisher by many of her fellow artists. This vessel
was commisioned by the Grices and remains among the best pieces in their
collection.
-
- ----
-
- Margaret Gutierrez. Santa Clara, 1936-
- Luther Gutierrez. Santa Clara, 1911-1987
- Tall Jar circa 1970
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.119
-
- The Gutierrez family is known for its modification of classical slips
to create unique colors and a low-luster vessel surface which remains visually
rich due to polishing with a cloth rather than the typical hard stone.
-
- ----
-
- Marian Rose Naranjo. Santa Clara, life dates unknown
- Kevin Naranjo. Santa Clara, 1972-
- Miniature Seed Jar 1994
- Earthenware with slip paint, sgraffitto decoration
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.118
-
- The sgraffito technique is an innovation of Santa Clara artists, first
popularized in the 1970s. The precise detail and boldness of the design
program belie the tiny size of this spherical jar made by two of the finest
free-hand, sgraffito artists working today.
-
- --- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [CASE 4 - SUBSECTION CASE PANEL]
-
- Micaceous Ware
-
- Micaceous pottery, an ancient Pueblo ceramic type, was used primarily
for cooking vessels because the ware is highly resistant to thermal shock.
Yet micaceous clays challenge the artist. They are difficult to form into
vessels because they easily collapse. The ware is vulnerable to fire-clouding
during the firing process, and the clay's glittery quality can overpower
the vessel. Therefore, micaceous ware demands artistic simplicity, aesthetic
sensitivity and proper spiritual attitude to create a successful artwork.
-
- Nambe Pueblo was particularly renowned for micaceous cooking pots.
The style was brought back to life in the 1980s by Lonnie Vigil, who states
he was called by Clay Mother to take up her work. His large, thin-walled
creations display a nearly impossible mastery of this taxing medium.
-
- ----
-
- Lonnie Vigil. Nambe, 1949-
- Jar 1995
- Micaceous earthenware
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.86
-
- Lonnie Vigil allows the firing process to make known its presence in
the form of fire clouds. Yet their aesthetically appropriate locations
intimate control-be it technical, spiritual or otherwise-over this uncontrollable
process.
-
- ----
-
- Lonnie Vigil. Nambe, 1949-
- Asymmetrical Jar circa 1990s
- Micaceous earthenware
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.126
-
- The asymmetical neck and fire-clouded shoulder recall the blown-out
cone of a volcano surrounded by pumice and ash, reflecting the New Mexican
landscape.
-
- ----
-
- Lonnie Vigil. Nambe, 1949-
- Jar circa 1990s
- Micaceous earthenware
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.85
-
- The elegant yet simple form balances the visual power of the shimmering
micaceous clay. Taking 1.5 years to produce, the artist wanted this vessel
to come to North Carolina for local ceramicists to experience this special
pottery tradition.
-
- -------
-
- Felipe Ortega. Jicarilla Apache, 1952-
- Seed Jar 1995
- Micaceous earthenware
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2003.114.2
-
- Felipe Ortega reaches beyond traditional boundaries of decoration by
applying horse hair to the surface of vessels prior to firing, the carbonized
hairs creating stark yet sinuous lines that enhance the organic quality
of his works.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [CASE 5 - SUBSECTION CASE TEXT PANEL]
-
- The Middle Rio Grande Traditions: Cochiti, Santo Domingo, and San
Felipe Pueblos
- Polychrome painting typifies the ceramics of the Middle Rio Grande
pueblos. Santo Domingo Pueblo has flourished due to its early entrance
into the tourist market and artistic efforts of the extended Tenorio-Pacheco-Coriz
families. Its style, featuring classical forms and iconographic traditions,
includes bold geometric designs and decorative images of plants and animals
because religious precepts forbid the painting of human figures or sacred
images on pottery made for sale. San Felipe Pueblo has recently revived
polychrome painting to explore new modes of personal expression. Cochiti
Pueble has a long history of producing figural works and painted vessels.
-
- ---
-
- Hilda Coriz. Santo Domingo, 1949-2007
- Arthur Coriz. Santo Domingo, 1948-1998
- Water Jar circa 1994
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.23
-
- The distinctive Santo Domingo bird embellishes this water jar, its
solid red and black wings and slightly patterned tail characterize the
style.
-
- ---
-
- Robert Tenorio. Santo Domingo, 1950-
- Seed Jar 1996
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.19
-
- Made by the preeminant clay artist Robert Tenorio, this unusually-shaped
jar is decorated with maize and other important flowering plants combined
with symbolic, geometric forms.
-
- ---
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- Virgil Ortiz. Cochiti, 1969-
- Jar late 20th century
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.6
-
- The similarity of slip characteristics and the adherence to non-figural,
painted imagery reflect the shared cultural heritage and history of Cochiti
and Santo Domingo. Virgil Ortiz, renowned for his unique figural sculptures,
also is an accomplished painter famous for refined design fields and expressive
painted lines.
-
- ----
-
- Daryl Candelario. San Felipe, 1970-
- Seed Jar 1999
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.105
-
- The seemingly assembled fragments of independent imagery, some painted
and some carved, resemble ancient potsherds pieced together to form a whole
vessel, uniting ancient and modern spectra of clay artistry. The motifs
include rain, the wotsana´we water bird, clouds of many types,
and maize, which together comprise the artist's unified petition for the
blessing of life-giving rain.
-
- ----
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- Diego Romero. Cochiti, 1964-
- Bowl late 20th Century
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Promised Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. PG2003.63.124
-
- Diego Romero adapts the ancient Mimbres narrative bowl to recount vignettes
of modern life, here his famous transformation of the Mimbres hero twins
into the Chongo Brothers. These alcoholic siblings stumble through the
obstacles of modern life, especially alcohol that awaits the unwary, the
brothers being metaphors for the world's disenfranchised.
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- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [CASE 6 - SUBSECTION CASE PANEL]
-
-
- The Jemez River Valley Traditions: Jemez and Zia Pueblos
-
- After the Pueblo Rebellion against the Spanish is 1680, many people
fled to the Jemez Valley and a symbiotic relationship developed among them.
The Jemez people abandoned pottery making and focused on farming because
of the fertile soils surrounding their pueblo. They traded for pottery
from their Zia neighbors who had maintained the ceramic arts. Today, Zia
potters are unique in their use of basalt temper which produces unusually
durable pottery. Their works also are distinguished by a dense, black slip
made from manganese oxide rather than the bee plant, the common pigment
source for black slip paint.
-
- ----
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- Eusebia Shije. Zia, 1936-
- Dough Bowl 1988
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2003.114.14
-
- Zia pottery designs are symbolic messages that pertain to the function
of the vessel they decorate. Here, roadrunners, the bearers of prayers,
and maize plants adorn this large bowl used to prepare maize or wheat dough
for bread.
-
- ----
- Juanita Fragua. Jemez, 1935-
- Wedding Jar 1993
- Earthenware with slip paint
- Gift of Gretchen and Nelson Grice. 2006.85.24
-
- Jemez Pueblo artists look to their own traditions as well as neighboring
ceramic styles for inspiration. The double-spouted, strap-handled wedding
jar is a distinctive Santa Clara Pueblo shape which has been adopted by
many potters throughout New Mexico and Arizona. This vessel won first prize
in the 1993 Santa Fe Indian Market.
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- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- [CASE 7 - SUBSECTION CASE PANEL]
-
- Figural Traditions of the Middle and Northern Rio Grande Pueblos
-