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Otellie Loloma

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Full Name
  
Otellie Pasiyav

Spouse
  
Charles Loloma

Died
  
January 30, 1993

Name
  
Otellie Loloma

Nationality
  
Hopi, American


Otellie Loloma Charles and Otellie Loloma Hopi Artists and the Museum of

Born
  
December 31, 1921 (
1921-12-31
)
Second Mesa, Arizona

Known for
  
Hopi traditional pottery, dance, and jewelry

Awards
  
Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award (1991)

Otellie Loloma (December 30, 1921 — January 30, 1993) was an American artist, specializing in Hopi traditional pottery and dance, and working with her husband Charles Loloma on jewelry design.

Contents

Otellie Loloma The Indian Arts Crafts Board Otellie Loloma

Early life and education

Otellie Pasiyava was raised on a Hopi reservation at Second Mesa, Arizona, and educated in schools run by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. She made clay objects from childhood, but began formal training in pottery at age 23, when she was invited to study on a scholarship at the School of the American Craftsman at Alfred University. She also attended Northern Arizona University and the College of Santa Fe.

Career

Otellie Loloma ran a shop at the Kiva Craft Center in Scottsdale, Arizona with her husband in the 1950s. She was one of the first instructors hired for the Southwest Indian Art Project in Tucson, Arizona, a summer institute funded by the Rockefeller Foundation in 1960-1961. She joined the faculty of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1962, a position she held until her retirement in 1988. In 1991, she was honored with a Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award.

In addition to her expertise in pottery, Loloma taught Native American dance with colleague Josephine Myers-Wapp; they performed at the White House and at the 1968 Summer Olympics with their students. In 1970, she was one of two women among eight diverse artists featured in an ABC documentary, "With These Hands: The Rebirth of the American Craftsman," along with Paul Soldner, Peter Voulkos, Dorian Zachai (the other woman artist), Clayton Bailey, James Tanner, Harry Nohr, and J. B. Blunk.

Personal life and legacy

Otellie Pasiyava married Hopi jewelry designer Charles Loloma in 1947. They divorced in 1965. Otellie Loloma died in 1992, age 70. Works by Otellie Loloma are included in the permanent collections at the Museum of the American Indian, the Heard Museum, the Cooper-Hewitt Museum and the Philbrook Museum of Art, among other institutions.

Her nephew Nathan Begaye became an artist in pottery after his aunt. Her other notable students included painter Dan Namingha. Her friend and IAIA colleague, poet James A. McGrath, wrote a book of poems about (and dedicated to) Otellie Loloma, titled The Sun is a Wandering Hunter (2014).

References

Otellie Loloma Wikipedia