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Pablita Velarde

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Full Name
  
Tse Tsan

Name
  
Pablita Velarde


Known for
  
Painter

Nationality
  
USA

Books
  
Old father story teller

Pablita Velarde The Turtle Dance 1953 Pablita Velarde Tse Tsan Golden

Born
  
September 19, 1918 (
1918-09-19
)
Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico, USA

Died
  
January 12, 2006, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States

Awards
  
Ordre des Palmes Academiques

Colores golden dawn the pueblo paintings of pablita velarde new mexico pbs


Pablita Velarde (September 19, 1918 – January 12, 2006) born Tse Tsan (Tewa, "Golden Dawn") was an American painter.

Contents

Pablita Velarde 6a01156f5f4ba1970b014e5fbb4690970c500wi

Nmpbs colores painter pablita velarde


Early life

Pablita Velarde wwwnpsgovmuseumexhibitsbandartimagesartco

Velarde was born on Santa Clara Pueblo near Española, New Mexico. After the death of her mother when Pablita was about five years old, she and two of her sisters were sent to St Catherine's Indian School in Santa Fe. At the age of fourteen, she was accepted to Dorothy Dunn's Santa Fe Studio Art School at the Santa Fe Indian School. There, she becomes an accomplished painter in the Dunn style, known as "flat painting".

Art career

Pablita Velarde Pablita Velarde Bandelier National Monument US

Her early paintings were exclusively watercolors, but later in life she learned how to prepare paints from natural pigments (a process similar to, but not the same as fresco secco). She used these paints to produce what she called "earth paintings". She obtained the pigments from minerals and rocks, which she ground on a metate and mano until the result was a powdery substance from which she made her paints.

Pablita Velarde httpsd3el53au0d7w62cloudfrontnetwpcontentu

In 1939, Velarde was commissioned by the National Park Service under a grant from the Works Progress Administration (WPA) to depict scenes of traditional Pueblo life for visitors to the Bandelier National Monument.

Pablita Velarde Pablita Velarde Native American Painter Adobe Gallery Santa Fe

Following her work at Bandelier, Velarde went on to become one of the most accomplished Native American painters of her generation, with solo exhibitions throughout the United States, including her native New Mexico, as well as Florida and California. In 1953, she was the first woman to receive the Grand Purchase Award at the Philbrook Museum of Art’s Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Painting. In 1954 the French government honored her with the Palmes Académiques for excellence in art. In 1960 she published a book of stories and paintings, Old Father, the Storyteller.

Pablita Velarde Pablita Velarde Artist Fine Art Prices Auction Records for

In a 1979 interview she said, "Painting was not considered women's work in my time. A woman was supposed to be just a woman, like a housewife and a mother and chief cook. Those were things I wasn't interested in."

Pablita Velarde Pablita Velardes Studio Heard Museum

Velarde's work is exhibited in public and private collections including the Bandelier National Monument museum, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, the Avery Collection at the Arizona State Museum, the Ruth and Charles Elkus Collection of Native American Art, and in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

Personal life

In 1942, Pablita married Herbert Hardin, a graduate of the University of California who she had known for some time. Her daughter, Helen Hardin, and her granddaughter Margarete Bagshaw became prominent artists in their own right.

Awards and honors

  • Palmes Académiques, 1954
  • New Mexico Governor's Award, 1977
  • 1990 Lifetime Achievement Award - national Women's Caucus for Art
  • Santa Fe Living Treasure
  • References

    Pablita Velarde Wikipedia