Sometimes it pays to have good neighbors.In the late 1960s, Boyd Tsosie, then a 13-year-old high school student in Many Farms, Arizona, lived four houses down from famous jeweler Kenneth Begay. “He was teaching in Chinle at the Navajo Community College at the time. I was a freshman who was also going to school in Chinle,” Tsosie remembers. “Every now and then I would see him outside, so I introduced myself and he told me to experiment on anything I could get my hands on. All I had at the time was one of those butane handheld torches. But whatever Kenneth told me to do that’s what I would do.”
With periodic, and impromptu, instruction from Begay, Tsosie got to work with any materials he could scrape together. The largely self-taught artist proceeded until he was 19 years old and then “it became a desperation to make jewelry,” he says. “That’s when I really started. I didn’t like traditional jewelry and I was very self-conscious, so no one ever saw some of my first pieces. Mostly what I would do was replicate other works. Later, Arizona Highways started making their jewelry issues and that’s where I really discovered what jewelry could be. I would see pieces by Lee Yazzie or Preston [Monongye] or Charles Loloma. This is what I needed to see.”
Bu hikaye Native American Art Magazine dergisinin December - January 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Native American Art Magazine dergisinin December - January 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Weaving History into Art
The legacy of Cherokee artist Shan Goshorn is honored during an exhibition at the Gilcrease Museum.
Visual Voices
Briscoe Western Art Museum hosts a traveling exhibition dedicated to contemporary Chickasaw artwork through January 18.
Through the Kaleidoscope
The beauty of color and design are on full display in the exhibition Through the Kaleidoscope at Exhibit C Native Gallery & Gifts in Oklahoma City.
New Horizons
A new Native American-owned art gallery is set to open near the end of the year in Buffalo, New York, in the middle of the Allentown historic district.
Keeping Art Alive
Galleries and dealers come together to bring World Tribal and Native American Art to homes through a virtual event.
Nacimientos
Every year near the holiday season, Adobe Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, holds its Native American Nacimientos exhibition.
Expanded Audience
Cherokee Art Market welcomes collectors from all over the globe to its website for a virtual event from December 7 to 21.
Larger Than Memory
The Heard Museum presents a large collection of contemporary art from Indigenous North America.
GOOD MEDICINE
Navajo jeweler Boyd Tsosie brings his life and culture into his art.
Charging Ahead
On view now at King Galleries in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is Charging Forward, a new two-artist show featuring the pottery of Kaa Folwell and the paintings of Derek No-Sun Brown.