TOMBOLO ART MEDIA

TOMBOLO ART MEDIA
LAUNCHING FEBRUARY 2014

Thursday, August 22, 2013

"Collecting Memories...Not Just Art" Recap of 2013 SWAIA Indian Market

Well, 2013 SWAIA Indian Market Week is over.  It's easy for me to get sad and go into withdrawal because I miss my artist friends already.  That's okay because I know I will see them all soon enough and have the opportunity to attend parties with them, give and receive hugs,and see some of the best fine art around. I'm also looking forward to getting to know all the new friends just a little bit better the next time around.
 
Painting by Jodi Webster
Photo: The Artist
















Bronze sculpture by Holly Wilson
Photo: Paul Niemi

For me, one of the standout artists this year was Jodi Webster, a master self-taught Ho-Chunk/Potawatomi artist working mostly in graphite.  It was her first Santa Fe Indian Market.  She's easy-going, down-to-earth and bursting with talent that isn't limited by one style.  In addition to my ongoing love affair with the brilliant and thoughtfully commentative basketry of contemporary Cherokee artist Shan Goshorn, I am adding the bronze sculpture and mixed media work of Delaware/Cherokee Holly Wilson to my all-time fave list.  Mixing traditional Native lore with children, masks and the slightly odd, her work is exciting, out of the ordinary, and seems to be setting the Native art world on fire. This, too,  was her first SWAIA Indian Market.  She also had an additional opening at Blue Rain Gallery near the Santa Fe Plaza, so I have no doubt the New Mexico skies will see her star rise very soon.  I also enjoyed seeing the colorful and abstract paintings by Patrick Dean Hubbell of the DinĂ© Nation (Navajo).
Shan Goshorn and her award-winning
Cherokee basketry woven from paper splints with
archival quality printed images


 
One of the beautiful art-filled
rooms at
Lone Dog Noisecat
If you have the opportunity, be sure to stop by Ed Archie Noisecat's new gallery Lone Dog Noisecat just off Canyon Road.  He offers work by Northwest Coast artist, Inuit sculptures, paintings by some of Santa Fe's "cool" royalty, in addition to his own pieces. There's lots to see, and I think it is one of the best contemporary Native galleries in the City Different.
 





From tunes by Shelley Morningsong and dancing by Fabian Fontenelle to poetry readings by Laguna Pueblo potter and poet Max Early, to fashions by Orlando Dugi, Dorothy Grant, and Penny Singer , there were so many special things to see, hear and experience this year at Santa Fe Indian Market.

Stormtrooper hand-beaded cuff by Diné artist Craig Kelly
 
 

















Here is my compilation video of moving and still images from the 2013 SWAIA Indian Market.  It was truly an amazing time.  While I collected some art, I collected even more friendships. I look forward to watching them grow!

Monday, August 12, 2013

SWAIA Indian Market: Adding to Your Collection...One Friend at a Time

Hoop Dancer Tony Duncan at SWAIA Indian Market
Photo: Paul Niemi (2011)
When some of us were kids (long before Facebook), our best friends or classmates would move away to new cities.  It was always a sad event.  While they left behind their phone numbers so you could call on a birthday to "catch up," you knew that once a few months had passed, you would make new friends and move on. Besides, those long-distance calls weren't really in the family budget! It was always a possibility that you would never see your friends again, and that was a reality we all accepted.  High school and college beckoned us, and people came in and out of our lives.  Then, all of a sudden, we were in the adult world. People became busier, and it seemed harder to make those amazing close relationships you used to have.  Social media has now revolutionized how we stay in touch, how we communicate and how we connect, but it's not the same as real face-to-face communication with open-hearted people who treat you with the respect of a bygone era. 

Speaking of social media, SWAIA Santa Fe Indian Market has done a tremendous job at connecting the world with Native American art, film, music, fashion and culture through social media.  While I love to stay connected via the Internet with many people, for me, one of the best things about Market is so basic, so natural, and so wonderful--The friendships that are made and endure year after year at Indian Market.  Unlike the days when childhood classmates once moved away never to be heard from again, Santa Fe Indian Market Week is always the time when people come "home."  You always know they'll be there each August. It's a crossroads of sorts on Santa Fe's Historic Plaza, where hospitality reigns, inevitable hugs happen, old friendships grow stronger and new ones are kindled.

That's why SWAIA Indian Market is a unique family. The art has changed, some faces have come, gone and been replaced by eager new ones, but old fashioned values still play out amongst the white booths dotting Santa Fe's downtown corridor.  And for the spectator, when you're there, you're treated like part of the family. You're welcomed with the intent that you will look,  really see and learn about Native culture (There's so much to learn!). Who knows?  You may want to buy! That  purchase of an artist's work might just lead to more purchases, year after year, and result in lifelong friendships.
Sgraffito and Stone-polished Handcoiled
Jemez Pueblo Pot by Alfreda Fragua
Photo: Alfreda Fragua

Being an advocate for Native American art is my passion, and I LOVE introducing contemporary Native American art to those who may know nothing about it. It's even better when I can change someone's perception of what Native American art is.  The landscape (pardon the pun!) is vast when it comes to the kinds of pieces you'll see at Santa Fe Indian Market.  The truth is, just like Native arts and crafts have changed over history due to contact with new peoples and new materials, so is contemporary Native American art evolving all the time. Formal art education inspires some artists to take Native art where it's never gone before.  Artists also experiment with forms and mediums each year to test their artistic mettle.  Submissions for Indian Market award judging get bigger and bolder every year, and it's exciting to see.

So if you're attending SWAIA Indian Market Week for the first time, what do you need to know?

1)  Always feel free to ask questions.  While many collectors typically "want a piece" of an artist at his or her booth, they are there to talk about their work, their culture and, most importantly, to sell.

2) Most artists understand that touching and feeling impacts someone's intent to buy.  Most will let you handle smaller items, but be sure to ask permission first.  Many people will invite you to do so from the get-go, but awaiting or asking permission shows respect.  The same is true if you want to snap a photograph.

3) Buy what you like!  You have to live with it, so make sure you love it.  There are original works of art by more than 1,100 top Native American artists from the United States and Canada available for purchase. Prices range from about $10 on up.

4) If something is out of your budget, don't worry.  Many artists are generational, so you'll likely be able to find pieces by other "lesser-known" artists for a fraction of the price of works by more famous artists.  Buying pieces by young children is a great way to start a collection and become familiar with work by all family members.

5) Come to SWAIA Indian Market Week with an open mind and open heart.  Indian Market is a great learning opportunity for both children and adults.  These artists live all around us in a contemporary world, and Market is a wonderful place to discover our commonalities.  Of course, come hungry because you're also going to want to eat Indian tacos and fry bread that vendors will be selling on the Plaza!

This Friday, August 16, I'll be on KASA Fox 2's "New Mexico Style" talking about collecting memories at Indian Market.   Check out my last year's appearance on buying affordable art at Indian Market HERE:


http://www.kasa.com/dpp/nm_style/features/affordable-original-art-at-indian-market

Happy Indian Market Week!