Original Painting of a Clown, Female Dancer and Drummer [SOLD]
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- Category: Paintings
- Origin: San Ildefonso Pueblo, Po-woh-ge-oweenge
- Medium: ink, pigment
- Size: 7-1/2” x 12-1/2” image;
13-1/2” x 18-1/2” framed - Item # C3814A SOLD
Alfonso Roybal (Awa Tsireh) was many things to his pueblo of San Ildefonso: he was a farmer, pottery painter, museum employee, painter and silversmith. He was born in 1898 and died in 1955. He was painting before 1917. He was the oldest of the early group of pueblo painters. His formal education had not extended beyond primary grades. He was versatile in his styles of painting. He was equally comfortable with representational, semi-realistic, conventional, and abstract.
Awa Tsireh was early recognized beyond his native world as an outstanding Indian artist. His watercolors where sent by Alice Corbin Henderson to the Arts Club of Chicago for a special exhibit in 1920. His paintings appeared in early exhibits in Santa Fe, and he was among the several artists to receive prizes at the first Santa Fe Indian Market. In 1925, the Chicago papers were generous in their acclaim for his exhibit in the Newberry Library. The Exposition of Indian Tribal Arts in New York in 1931 included Awa Tsireh paintings.
This appears to be a very early painting by Awa Tsireh. It is very traditional pueblo flat style void of any ground plane or other objects. Only the participants—a Koosa Clown, a Female Dancer, and a Drummer—are represented. It appears to be drawn with ink and filled in with pigments.
Condition: appears to be in original condition
Provenance: formerly in the collection of Navajo artist Tony Abeyta
Recommended Reading: Pueblo Indian Painting: Tradition and Modernism in New Mexico, 1900-1930 by J. J. Brody
- Category: Paintings
- Origin: San Ildefonso Pueblo, Po-woh-ge-oweenge
- Medium: ink, pigment
- Size: 7-1/2” x 12-1/2” image;
13-1/2” x 18-1/2” framed - Item # C3814A SOLD
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