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Jason García Art Pottery Native American Santa Clara Pueblo New Mexico Figure

$ 316.8

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Original or Reproduction: original
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Provenance: Ownership History Not Available
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Origin: New Mexico
  • Artisan: Jason Garcia
  • Tribal Affiliation: Tewa American
  • Culture: Native American: US
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    Absolutely stunning small figurine signed Jason García. This piece is made of pottery and measures approximately 3 1/2x 1 1/2”. Excellent condition! Please see photos for details and thank you for your interest!
    “Jason Garcia is a contemporary Native American artist in the United States, who was born in Santa Clara, New Mexico. His work has been exhibited the Smithsonian in Washington D.C, the Heard Museum in Phoenix, the Palm Springs Art Museum, and many more. He won the 2018 Mentor Fellowship Award under the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation amongst many others. He teaches many Native American children at summer programs and elementary schools about the art he creates and techniques he uses. Garcia documents the "ever-changing cultural landscape" of Santa Clara.[1] He embodies traditional Pueblo techniques with contemporary imagery; combining native stories, ceremonies, and traditions with modern era constructions such as technology. His primary techniques are clay tiles and printmaking, including lithography, serigraphy, and etching.”
    Early years
    Jason Garcia, also known as Okuu Pin, translating to "turtle mountain," is from the Santa Clara Pueblo Tewa tribe. His name is representative of the Sandia Mountains that are located East of Albuquerque. The traditional Tewa name for Santa Clara is Khapo Owinge which means rose path.Garcia grew up in an artistic environment, influencing his passion for art making. His paternal and maternal family members were well known pueblo potters, especially his grandmother, Gloria Garcia, also known as Goldenrod, for her works.[3] His family would make pottery illustrating Pueblo traditions and ceremonies; as a kid, Garcia did not fully understand the imagery and art pieces. Therefore, he began to make artworks with imagery he was familiar with, such as, Star Wars, Spiderman, and Darth Vader; using the same traditional Pueblo techniques to create them.Another big influence on Garcia was the well-known painter, Pablita Velarde from the Santa Clara Pueblo; she was a painter of the Santa Fe Indian Studio. She would document how the Pueblo was changing and how they were still able to maintain their Pueblo traditions and culture. Very similarly, Garcia is doing the same thing, documenting the changes of the Pueblo, through the contemporary lens. He would do this by incorporating images such as television, cell phones, and social problems that are relevant to today's society. He sees how these modern aspects of life are changing the pueblo lifestyle, but how the people from Santa Clara are still able to preserve their native culture and language, and that's what he demonstrates through his artworks.Along with Garcia's iconography in his paintings, his techniques were also a big aspect in incorporating both traditional and contemporary features. Garcia would often use traditional materials and pottery techniques the traditional Pueblo way, with hand-gathered clay, native clay slips and outdoor firings. Garcia also uses more modern techniques such as printmaking. He also used various printmaking techniques such as lithography, serigraphy, and etching. This deviates from the traditional techniques that the Pueblo community would use, but Garcia wanted to appeal to his generation as well as future generations. His works consist of contemporary iconography, therefore his usage of more modern techniques would be more relevant. Garcia felt that these techniques would connect him and the people that viewed his work to his Ancestral past as well as connect future generations to Tewa traditions. He also felt that it was important for his culture to keep certain traditions alive that had been passed down to him and that he had grown up with.Garcia studied at the University of New Mexico, where he got his Bachelor's degree in Fine Arts in 1998.[4] He recently completed his Masters of Fine Arts at the University of Wisconsin in 2016.
    Born
    Kha'po Owingeh (Santa Clara Pueblo)
    Nationality
    Tewa American
    Education
    BFA, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
    MFA University of Wisconsin, Madison
    Known for
    Contemporary art
    Exhibitions
    2011 “11.11.11--First Year Graduate Show” Art Lofts Gallery, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
    2011 “Counting Coup” Museum of Contemporary Native Art, Santa Fe, NM
    2011 Soul Sister: Reimagining Kateri Tekakwitha- Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe, NM
    2011 “Comic Art Indigene” Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, CA
    2010 Transcending Traditions: Contemporary American Indian Artwork - Mesa Contemporary Arts, Mesa, AZ
    2010 POP! Popular Culture in American Indian Art - Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ
    2008 Map(ing) Exhibition - Tempe Marketplace Night Gallery, Tempe, AZ
    2007 Clay2 - Arizona State Museum, Tuson, AZ2006 Okuu Pin - The Art of Jason Garcia - Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque, NM
    2006 COLOR - Elements of Earth & Fire - Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Santa Fe, NM
    Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque (2006-2007) [4]
    2005 HOME - Native People in the Southwest - Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ
    Comic Art Indigene: Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC
    Comic Art Indigene: Museum of Indian Arts and Culture in Santa Fe, New Mexico
    Native Pop!: New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico
    Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe
    Heard Museum in Phoenix [4]
    Featured in: Kim and Pat Messier’s Hopi & Pueblo Tiles [4]
    Featured in: Steve Trimble’s 20th anniversary edition of Talking with the Clay: The Art of Pueblo Pottery in the 21st Century from SAR Press.[4]
    Collections
    Art Talks: Pueblo Warriors Jar by Jason Garcia Joins Rockwell Collection [6]
    King Galleries: Exceptional Pueblo Pottery and Native Art [8]
    National Hispanic Cultural Center | Albuquerque, NM
    Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art | Overland Park, KS
    The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art | Kansas City, MO
    Wheelright Museum of the American Indian | Santa Fe, NM
    Arizona State University | Tempe, AZ
    Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino | Pojoaque Pueblo, NM
    Heard Museum | Phoenix, AZ
    National Museum of the American Indian | Washington DC
    Santa Clara Pueblo Day School | Santa Clara Pueblo, NM
    Poeh Cultural Museum | Pojoaque Pueblo, NM
    National Museum of American History | Washington DC
    Honors and awards Edit
    2018 Mentor Artist Fellowship
    Where Garcia will mentor David Naranjo in the different printmaking techniques. Focusing on serigraphy-silkscreen printing. He will also teach Naranjo fine-art framing skills, exhibition preparation, and becoming involved in local art communities.[9]
    2017 Artist In Business Leadership Fellow: First Peoples Fund
    2016 Artist In Residency: Institute of American Indian Arts
    2016 Best of Classification and Best of Division Awards: SWAIA Santa Fe Indian Market
    2016 Advanced Opportunity Fellow: University of Wisconsin
    2015 Advanced Opportunity Fellow: University of Wisconsin
    2012 American Indian Chancellors Fellow: University of Wisconsin
    2012 Helen Cox Kersting Award: Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art
    2011 American Indian Chancellors Fellow: University of Wisconsin
    2010 Judges Choice Award: Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market
    2009 Best of Classification and Best of Division Awards: SWAIA Santa Fe Indian Market
    2008 Conrad House Award for Innovation: Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market
    2007 Ronald N. & Susan Dubin Fellow: School for Advanced Research
    2007 Honorable Mention: Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market
    2006 Second Place and Third Place Awards: SWAIA Santa Fe Indian Market
    2006 Best of Division Award
    2006 Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market
    2004 Artists Choice Award
    2003 Best of Division Award
    2002 First Place in Class II, Division F at the SWAIA Indian Market in Santa Fe