Archive

November 2021 Press Highlights

Good Old Fashioned American Craftsmanship,

The Pasatiempo by Jennifer Levin

“Shipping delays are on the horizon for the holiday season, so “shop local” may just be the gift-giving mantra for 2021. The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) brings back its in-person Winter Indian Market in time to select some fine art and handmade goods by award-winning Native American artists. Held Saturday, Nov. 20, and Sunday, Nov. 21, at La Fonda on the Plaza, the market features 150 of SWAIA’s juried Indigenous artists from the 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market in August. The event also includes an online auction.”

Five Things to Do This Weekend

by Maria Manuela for New Mexico Magazine

 

“Support Indigenous artists at Winter Indian Market, watch New Mexico’s arts stars shine, shop local in Las Cruces, sit with a symphony, and get some fiber.”

SFR Picks- Week of Nov.17

by Alex DeVore for the Santa Fe Reporter

 

 

Another Chance

If you missed out on this year’s return to an in-person Indian Market for whatever reason (travel, tickets, time, temperature, etc.), you’ll have another chance to check out work from Indigenous artists in an admittedly more subdued but no less excellent fashion. The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts Winter Indian Market returns to La Fonda on the Plaza with nearly 200 juried artists you might have caught at the big summer market (or not), a silent auction and more. Whether you’re adding to the collection, looking to catch the next big artist or simply love any massive gathering of intensely talented people, you’re bound to find something worth texting people about. It could be like, “OMG. Just saw most byoo-tee-full art of all time.” And then your friend will be like “K,” but you’ll know it was cool and that makes it worth it. (ADV)

 

 

‘I don’t believe in putting myself in a box’ by Kathaleen Roberts

for the Albuquerque Journal

 

Artist Roberta Begaye

 

Her life changed after her fiancee asked her to paint a portrait of Muhammad Ali.

“One day I was at work and she said, ‘I have a surprise for you,’ ” Begaye said. “She said, ‘I started a Facebook page for you.’ ”

By 2017, Begaye was taking her artwork seriously, entering the Santa Fe Indian Market.

“I will always remember a specific powerful moment in June 2017, right after a successful art show,” she stated. “My hands had a buzzing feeling. I looked down at my palms and finally acknowledged the Creator’s gift I was given. This wasn’t just doodling.”

 

 

Winter Indian Market Returns To Santa Fe November 20 – 21

by Cowboys & Indians Editors

“After last year’s Virtual Winter Market, SWAIA is thrilled to be returning to an in-person market at the historic La Fonda Hotel,” said SWAIA executive director Kim Peone. Approximately 200 of SWAIA’s juried Indigenous artists from the 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market will be featured.

This year’s Winter Indian Market will also include a silent auction to raise funds to support SWAIA’s Indigenous art community.

If you’re there in person, bring an unwrapped present to donate to SWAIA’s holiday gift drive, to be donated to the Santa Fe Indigenous Center.

 

November 2021 Press Highlights Read More »

Winter Indian Market Returns to La Fonda Hotel in Downtown Santa Fe

SWAIA Logo

 

Winter Indian Market Returns to La Fonda Hotel

in Downtown Santa Fe

Holiday shopping direct from Indigenous Artists

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE—October 25, 2021; Santa Fe, N.M.— The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts is pleased to announce the dates of this year’s Winter Indian Market. The weekend shopping event will commence on Saturday, November 20, from 9 am to 5 pm and continue Sunday, November 21, from 10 am to 3 pm.  Beginning November 1, tickets will be available for sale at swaia.org.

“After last year’s Virtual Winter Market, SWAIA is thrilled to be returning to an in-person market at the historic La Fonda Hotel,” said Kim Peone, SWAIA’s Executive Director. Roughly 200 of SWAIA’s juried Indigenous artists from the 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market will be featured.

This year’s Winter Indian Market will also include a silent auction to raise funds to support SWAIA’s Indigenous art community. Online bidding will begin on Saturday from 10 am to 2 pm and on Sunday from 10 am to 1 pm.

Finally, please consider donating a new, unwrapped present to SWAIA’s holiday gift drive. All gifts will be donated to the Santa Fe Indigenous Center for children, infants to 16 years of age. For additional information and to donate, visit Santa Fe Indigenous Center’s non-profit information table at Winter Market on both Saturday and Sunday.

Photo: Artist, Wayland Namingha © Photo Gabriella Marks Photography for SWAIA

 

Media Inquiries:

Audrey N Rubinstein |505-490-5029 or audrey@themettaagency.com

DOWNLOAD Hi-Resolution Images

 

About SWAIA:

The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) is a non-profit organization supporting Native American arts and culture. It creates economic and cultural opportunities for Native American artists by producing and promoting the Santa Fe Indian Market, the biggest and most prestigious Indian art event in the world since 1922; cultivating excellence and innovation across traditional and non-traditional art forms; and developing programs and events that support, promote, and honor Native artists year-round. swaia.org 

 

 

Winter Indian Market Returns to La Fonda Hotel in Downtown Santa Fe Read More »

SWAIA Announces New Board Appointments

SWAIA Announces New Board Appointments In Advance of Centennial Year

L. Stephine Poston elected Chair – SWAIA Board of Directors


NEWS PROVIDED BY

Southwestern Association for Indian Arts 

Oct 14, 2021, 06:45 ET


SANTA FE, N.M.Oct. 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) is pleased to announce the appointment of its newly elected executive committee and board members.  L. Stephine Poston (Sandia Pueblo), who has served on the board for the past 4 years, as well as a previous term from 2010 – 2015 has been elected Board Chair. Poston succeeds Tom Teegarden and brings years of experience as a communications leader within the Native American community.

“I am honored to work collaboratively to usher in the Centennial of the prestigious Indian Market. We are a diverse board with a common commitment to SWAIA’s mission: bringing Native arts to the world by inspiring artistic excellence, fostering education and creating meaningful partnerships. I want to thank Tom Teegarden for navigating the pandemic waters and creating a pathway for Centennial,” said Poston.

Bill Lomax (Gitxsan), Vice President, Goldman Sachs’ Investment Management Division, will serve as the board’s Vice-Chair. Scott Malouf was elected treasurer and Angelique Albert (Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes) will act as secretary.

SWAIA also inducted new board members Russell Sanchez (San Ildefonso Pueblo), Elias GallegosPatricia Marroquin Norby (Purépecha), JoAnn Chase (Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara), Walter Lamar (Blackfeet Nation/ Wichita Tribe), Angelique Albert (Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes) and Bill Lomax (Gitxsan).

“We are delighted with the new board appointments, which include leaders in tribal business and Indigenous art and speak to the health of our organization,” said Executive Director Kim Peone (Colville Confederated Tribes / Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians).

SWAIA’s 2021 Board Members:

Andrea Hanley (Navajo)— Chief curator at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Angelique Albert (Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes)— Chief Executive Officer American Indian Graduate Center

Bill Lomax (Gitxsan) —Vice President, Goldman Sachs

Chris Youngblood (Santa Clara Pueblo)— Potter

Elias Gallegos— Film actor/producer. Film & Media Director for renowned author and filmmaker George RR Martin

Patricia Marroquin Norby (Purépecha)— Associate Curator of Native American Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Scott Malouf—Owner of Drest and Malouf on the Plaza

Russell Sanchez (San Ildefonso Pueblo)— Potter

L. Stephine Poston (Sandia Pueblo)— CEO Poston & Associates

Tazbah McCullah (Diné/Navajo)—General Manager KSFR FM

Tom Teegarden—Vice President at High Water Mark, LLC

Randy Chitto (Mississippi Choctaw)— Sculpture Artist

JoAnn Chase (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Indian Nation)— Director of the American Indian Environmental Office, Office of International and Tribal Affairs

Walter Lamar (Blackfeet Nation/ Wichita Tribe)— Lamar Associates, Tribal Nations Consultant

Media Inquiries:

Audrey Rubinstein 505-490-5029| audrey@themettaagency.com

About The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA):
The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) is a non-profit organization supporting Native American arts and culture. It creates economic and cultural opportunities for Native American artists by producing and promoting the Santa Fe Indian Market, the biggest and most prestigious Indian art event in the world since 1922; cultivating excellence and innovation across traditional and non-traditional art forms; and developing programs and events that support, promote, and honor Native artists year-round. swaia.org 

Follow us on  FacebookInstagram and Twitter

SOURCE Southwestern Association for Indian Arts

SWAIA Announces New Board Appointments Read More »

Best of Show Winner Rhonda Holy Bear Bear (Cheyenne River Sioux) and her winning Doll, “Lakota Honor- Sees the Horses Woman.” photo©Tira Howard for SWAIA/ Santa Fe Indian Market

The 99th Annual Santa Fe Indian Market Announces Best of Show Winners

Best of Show Winner Rhonda Holy Bear Bear (Cheyenne River Sioux) and her winning Doll, “Lakota Honor- Sees the Horses Woman.” photo©Tira Howard for SWAIA/ Santa Fe Indian Market
Artist Rhonda Holy Bear is awarded Best of Show at Santa Fe Indian Market 2021 Awards Luncheon in the Beadwork/Quillwork Classification

Santa Fe Indian Market is pleased to announce this year’s Best of Show, Best of Class and Special Award winners in a variety of classifications. For 99 years, Santa Fe Indian Market, the world’s largest and most prestigious Native American art market, has awarded Best of Show winners to the nation’s most exceptional artists in a variety of juried categories.

Thirty experts in various media spent all day Thursday, August 19, reviewing and critiquing this year’s entries to determine the winners. The announcement of Best of Show and Best of Class winners was made public at the Best of Show Luncheon on Friday afternoon.

This year’s overall Best of Show winner is Rhonda Holy Bear’s (Cheyenne River Sioux) Doll, “Lakota Honor- Sees the Horses Woman.”

All Best of Show winners’ phenomenal artwork will be available this weekend during Santa Fe Indian Market— beginning with the Sneak Preview on Friday night from 2:00-4:00 p.m. at the Santa Fe Convention Center. This is the public’s first opportunity to see this year’s award-winning artwork. The General Preview, 4:30-6:30 p.m., immediately follows the Sneak Preview.

This year’s Best of Class winners by classification are:

Class I: Jewelry
Denise Wallace (Chugach Sugpiaq)
“Origins, Roots and Sources”

Class II: Pottery
Robert Patricio (Pueblo of Acoma)
“Raining Dawn to Dusk”

Class III: Painting, Drawing, Graphics & Photography
Thomas Tapia (Pueblo of Tesuque)
Watercolor, “Buffalo Elk Dance”

Class IV: Wooden Pueblo Figurative Carving & Sculpture
Arthur Holmes Jr. (Hopi)
Carving, “Broken Arrow”

Class V: Sculpture
Raymond Chee Sr. (Navajo/Diné)
Sculpture, “Healing into the Night”

Class VI: Textiles
Tyler Glasses (Navajo/ Diné)
Weaving, “Poncho for Days”

Class VII: Diverse Arts
Dana Warrington (Menominee/ Potawatomi)
Taxidermy, Otter wearing leather, quillwork, beadwork, lapidary, silver, weaving and feathers.
“Defending the Homeland”

Class VIII: Beadwork & Quillwork
Rhonda Holy Bear (Cheyenne River Sioux)
Doll, “Lakota Honor-Sees the Horses Woman”

Class XI: Basketry
Jeremey Frey (Passamaquoddy)
Double wall ash basket, “Malsom (Wolf)”

Class IX: Youth (artists aged 17 and under)
Aydrian Day (Anishinaabe, Lakota, Hochunk)
Beaded elk hide bag, “Mishkiikii Ode (Medicine of the Heart)”

2021 Special Award Winners:
Indigenous Collections Grand Award:
The Winner of this award will be announced at the end of August.

Special Youth Awards:
2nd Place Youth: Kiiyaanni Reeves (Navajo/ Diné)
3rd Place Youth: Mosgadace Casuse (Anishinaabe/ Navajo (Diné)

 

For media inquiries, contact:
Audrey Nadia Rubinstein
505 490 5029
audrey@themetaagency.com

 

The 99th Annual Santa Fe Indian Market Announces Best of Show Winners Read More »

International Partnership Unites Indigenous Fashion Leaders

International Partnership Unites North American Indigenous Fashion Leaders

 

International Partnership Unites North American Indigenous Fashion Leaders

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Santa Fe, NM; June 17, 2021: SWAIA Fashion, the highly acclaimed and largest Native North American fashion show which takes place annually during Santa Fe Indian Market, is proud to announce a partnership between SWAIA Indigenous Fashion, Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto (IFWTO), Vancouver Indigenous Fashion Week (VIFW) and the newly established Supernaturals Modelling Agency.

Together, the four organizations will strengthen the international impact and visibility of Indigenous fashion design, embracing IFWTO’s mission: “presenting works that celebrate Indigenous people and cultures, and welcoming innovative and meaningful expression, design and craftsmanship from designers.”

The alliance will convene at SWAIA’s 2021 Santa Fe Indian Market with Joleen Mitton of VIFW and Supernaturals Modelling Agency (co-founded by Patrick Shannon), Executive and Artistic Director Sage Paul of IFWTO and Amber-Dawn Bear Robe of SWAIA Fashion. The relationship between these powerhouse Indigenous fashion organizations signifies the enthusiasm for and expansion of Native art and fashion.

Indigenous fashion defies the conventions of traditional Native design. Vancouver Indigenous Fashion Week’s mission is shared by the four organizations, “Contemporary Indigenous fashion mixes the legacy of Indigenous artistry with modern day high regalia and street styles: it goes beyond surface beauty and highlights how worn identity can build connection with Indigenous values, wisdom, empowerment and history.”

SWAIA’s 2021 Fashion Show will take place on Sunday, August 22, from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. at the Santa Fe Convention Center featuring designers Jamie Okuma (Luiseño, Shoshone Bannock),
Orlando Dugi (Diné), Pamela Baker (Squamish/Kwakwaka’wakw) and Lauren Good Day (Arikara, Hidatsa, Blackfeet and Plains Cree).

SWAIA Fashion is expanding this year. On Saturday, August 21, SWAIA’s Annual Gala will feature new collections by Delina White (Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe) of I Am Anishinaabe, Yolanda Skelton (Gitxsan Nation) and Loren (Acoma Pueblo) and Valentina (Navajo) Aragon of Acanoc. Supernaturals Modelling Agency will be represented on the runway at both fashion shows.

Media Inquiries:

Audrey N. Rubinstein | METTA

505-490-5029 or audrey@themettaagency.com

###

About SWAIA Fashion:
SWAIA Fashion is the annual Fashion Show produced during Santa Fe Indian Market by curator and art historian Amber-Dawn Bear Robe (Siksika Nation). Bear Robe has presented and curated the fashion show, since 2014. Learn more at SWAIA Fashion

About Vancouver Fashion Week: VIFW

About Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto: IFWTO

About Supernaturals Modelling: Supernaturals Modelling

International Partnership Unites North American Indigenous Fashion Leaders Read More »

Yuxweluptun: Man of Masks by Dana Claxton

CLICK TO WATICH YUXWELUPTUN: MAN OF MASKS

By Dana Claxton

This short documentary serves as a portrait of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, one of Canada’s most important painters. We meet him at the Bisley Rifle Range in Surrey, England, where he’s literally shooting the Indian Act in a performance piece called “An Indian Shooting the Indian Act.” It’s in protest of the ongoing effects of the Act’s legislation on Indigenous people. We then follow him back to Canada, for interviews with the artist and a closer look at his work. 

 

Dana Claxton is a critically acclaimed international exhibiting artist. She works in film, video, photography, single and multi- channel video installation, and performance art. Her practice investigates indigenous beauty, the body, the socio-political and the spiritual. Her work has been shown internationally at the Museum of Modern Art (NYC), Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC), Walker Art Centre (Minneapolis, MN), Sundance Film Festival, Salt Lake City (UT), Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art, Indianapolis (IN) and the Museum of Contemporary Art (Sydney, AU), Cyrstal Bridges (Bentonville, AR), with exhibitions at Nasher Gallery of Art at Duke University (Durham, NC), Memphis Brooks Museum of Art (TN) and the Institute of Contemporary Art in Minneapolis (MN). Read More…

Yuxweluptun: Man of Masks by Dana Claxton Read More »

CIBOLA: Seven Cities of Gold

 

WATCH CIBOLA: SEVEN CITIES OF GOLD

A film by Jamison Chas Banks

1864- NEW MEXICO TERRITORY: While the Civil War rages in the east, a Confederate renegade embarks on a mythic trail of stolen Union gold. Rival bounty hunters vie to claim the riches and the Red Rebel’s scalp. There is no law here, but the law of man.
It is a time of GOLD.
It is a time of CIBOLA.

Performed by Jamison C. Banks, Frank Buffalo Hyde, Keith Secola, Garnett Thompson, August Walker, Leahi Kekahuna Mayfield, Marty Two Bulls, Cole Bee Wilson and Mark Herndon.
Co-Directed by Daniel Augustin Grignon.
Photography by Cameron Tafoya.
A Syndicate Production

Jamison Chas Banks is a multi-disciplinary artist who creates films, paintings, performances, and installations. His works often explore the history of war and territorial expansion, both literal and psychological. Banks appropriates and alters symbols employed in propaganda and popular culture and redeploys them in contexts that subvert their original meanings.

VISIT: JAMISON CHAS BANKS WEBSITE

CIBOLA: Seven Cities of Gold Read More »

SWAIA Artist Spotlight: Eugene Tapahe Art Heals, The Jingle Dress Project

 

 

Eugene Tapahe

Watch: Art Heals, The Jingle Dress Project

 

ART HEALS: THE JINGLE DRESS PROJECT

Our project originated from a dream to unite the beauty of the land and the healing power of the jingle dance during these uncertain times due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The origin of the jingle dance to the Ojibwe people happened during the influenza pandemic of 1918-19. It came as a dream to a father whose daughter was sick with the virus. His dream revealed the new dress and dance that had the power to heal. When the dresses were made, they were given to four women to perform the dance. When the little girl heard the sound of the jingles, she became stronger. By the end of the night she was dancing too. Our dream is to take this healing power to the land, to travel and capture a series of images that will document spiritual places where our ancestors once walked.

801-367-2524

www.tapahe.com

 

Purchase T-Shirts & Scarves: https://mailchi.mp/tapahe/art-heals-t…

Donate: Venmo @jingle-dress-project Donate: PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/tapah…

For Project Info: https://tapahe.com/jingle-dress-proje…

Instagram: @Tapahe @erin_tapahe @diontapahe @joannibegay.14 @sunnibegay

SWAIA Artist Spotlight: Eugene Tapahe Art Heals, The Jingle Dress Project Read More »

Kim Peone | Executive Director of SWAIA

Wake Up Call’s MK Mendoza speaks with Executive Director, Kim Peone

Indigenous Resilience Transforms Into Success and Poetic Justice at Virtual Santa Fe Indian Market

  OCT 22, 2020
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Kim Peone | Colville Confederated Tribes / Eastern Band of Cherokee IndiansWake Up Call’s MK Mendoza speaks with Executive Director of SWAIA, Kim Peone about the success experienced at this year’s virtual Santa Fe Indian Market, now placing it in the lead as a model for helping artists survive the pandemic. Once again the indigenous community shines with resilience: A moment of poetic justice as we pay homage to a population American history has not only attempted to conquer but all too often criminally neglected.

LISTEN

Wake Up Call’s MK Mendoza speaks with Executive Director, Kim Peone Read More »

Chef Spotlight: Tiffany Deer

CHEF TIFFANY DEER

Tiffany Wahsontiiostha Deer is a professional chef with a love of food and flavor, and a passion for cooking healthy and easy to prepare meals at home.
“In my mind, there are two separate baskets of Native food, or Mohawk food. One basket would be filled with our traditional food, which to me is what I grew up with—it’s meat pie, chicken and dumplings, the mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, pumpkin pie, turkey. When somebody says they’re having a wedding or an anniversary or a baby shower, “Oh, what are you serving?” “Oh, traditional,” you know automatically that that’s your lineup, that’s what you have to look forward to. That’s incredible, it’s delicious, but the other basket would be traditional food of our people, not what we’re consuming today but what we used to consume yesteryear, and that would be the Hubbard squash, the three sisters—corn, beans and squash—a lot of game…”
“..It’s the connection to our Mother Earth. We’ve grown it, and then what it gives us is like a gift from the Creator, and if you keep that in mind, you have that bond with the food that is more than just flavor…” Read More (from ‘A Very Mohawk Thanksgiving’ Roads & Kingdoms)

 

 

 

APTN: FEAST

Find FEAST on Facebook
Articles:
A Very Mohawk Thanksgiving

 

Chef Spotlight: Tiffany Deer Read More »