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Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty

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Nationality
  
Assiniboine Sioux

Known for
  
Beadwork, Quillwork

Name
  
Juanita Thunder

Movement
  
Traditional

Education
  
Family, self-taught


Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty

Born
  
1969

2011 swaia indian market doll maker juanita growing thunder fogarty


Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty (born 1969) is an Assiniboine Sioux bead worker and porcupine quill worker, who creates traditional Northern Plains regalia.

Contents

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Artists of Earth and Sky Series: Joyce et Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty


Background

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty juanita growing thunder fogarty Sucker Magazine

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty was born in Castro Valley, California in 1969; however, her family comes from the Fort Peck Indian Reservation, where Juanita spent much of her childhood.

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty UNCLE PAULIES WORLD 2011 SWAIA Indian Market Doll Maker Juanita

Her mother, Joyce Growing Thunder Fogarty, is also an acclaimed bead and quill artist and the only artist to have won best of show three times at the Santa Fe Indian Market. Both artists come from a long line of Plains Indians bead workers. Juanita learned skills from her mother and has been beading since the age of three.

Artwork

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty 2011 SWAIA Indian Market Doll Maker Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty

Fogarty creates traditional Plains clothing and accessories, such as purses, pipe bags, dolls, cradle boards, rifle scabbards, and knife cases – all adorned with beadwork or porcupine quill embroidery.

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty Joyce Growing Thunder Fogarty Female Doll Assiniboine or Sioux

Her quillwork is labor-intensive. She gathers her own quills from freshly killed porcupines, then washes and dyes them. She uses both synthetic and natural dyes, such as bloodroot, blackberries, and wolf moss. Sorting the quills by color and size is the lengthiest step in the process. The quills are then softened in a bath of warm water, and Fogarty flattens them with her own teeth. She then appliqués or wraps the quills to moose or deer hide to create intricate patterns.

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty The National Museum of the American Indian March 10 2016

The designs of her artwork are both abstract and realistic and are based on nature, daily life, and the mythology of her tribes. She says that traditional designs of her tribe would, "reflect what the people saw, and what they had going on in their lives at the time ... maybe somebody in their family had gone to war or battle."

Fogarty has won best of class four times at the Santa Fe Indian Market. She also dances at powwows in regalia created by her family over the course of seven years. Today she lives in North San Juan, California.

References

Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty Wikipedia