TOMBOLO ART MEDIA

TOMBOLO ART MEDIA
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Showing posts with label SiLowLeetSa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SiLowLeetSa. Show all posts

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Painting Gives Coast Salish Artist Creative Rebirth Filled with Humor

"Seahawks Nest" by Emerging Lummi
Artist Phillip T. Solomon
Just three years ago, twenty-seven year-old painter and shoe artist Phillip T. Solomon from the Lummi Nation, wasn't sure where his life was going.  It could only go forward because a mere seven years prior, his life was quickly moving backwards and obviously in the wrong direction.

Solomon is quick to tell you that he spent some long hard time in prison in Washington State.  Even though he didn't commit the crime, he was still charged with it and ended up serving a long sentence.  While incarcerated, Solomon learned some important life lessons and got to know himself a little bit more. 

A product of an absentee father, Solomon spent much of his life living between his mother's care and foster homes.  His connection to the Lummi culture was very weak since he had lived away from the Lummi Reservation. While in prison, Solomon was elected to be a drum carrier for traditional ceremonies within the prison walls.  He learned to beat the drum and sing traditional songs.  All his life, he had left his hair cut short.  While in prison, he began to grow it long in the traditional way and began to have questions about his culture.  When no one had answers for him, he began to research and learn as much as he could.  When he left prison, he began drawing again. It was something he stopped doing around age 15 when things started to get bad for him.  Now, at age 24, he felt a renewed passion for the art--a disclipline he had loved since childhood. In spite of the fact that his father was never around, Solomon remembers that his dad was an amazing artist. In fact, he credits Thomas Solomon as his biggest inspiration, with his mother and sister leading close behind.

In 2010, Solomon decided to enroll at the Northwest Indian College to take some math, English and art courses.  He found an advocate at the Coast Salish Institute of NWIC, and she encouraged him to start focusing on incorporating authentic Coast Salish designs into his art.  Soon after enrolling, he was asked to submit a design for a college logo contest and won. It was followed by another logo contest win.
Pair of Painted Shoes for Phillip Solomon's
Salish Stories at Coast Salish Creations
In the summer of 2011, Solomon first tried his hand at painting a pair of shoes with his designs.  This was well before he even knew who Nooksack/Chinese/French and Scottish custom shoe artist Louie Gong was (he now considers Gong one of his heroes).  After wearing the shoes, people at Lummi began to notice them. Suddenly he couldn't keep up with the orders.

In 2012, he was asked to be part of a mural team to create a large piece for the outside walls of the old Northwest Indian College Training Building near the Lummi Island Ferry. He gained even more recognition inside and outside the Lummi community as a result of the project. 

In late 2012, Phillip Solomon's work caught the eye of  SiLowLeetSa (a.k.a. Doralee Sanchez), owner of the new Bellingham gallery Coast Salish Creations.   Impressed with his sense of line and creativity, Sanchez decided to give Solomon his own show. Entitled Salish Stories: Works by Contemporary Painter and Shoe Artist Phillip Solomon, the show will offer collectors the opportunity to purchase canvases and painted shoes that express Solomon's love for life, his humor and desire to teach people about Coast Salish lore and Lummi culture. He is wonderfully versatile in his styles and is perhaps one of the best young Coast Salish artists I have seen of late.

Salish Stories opens today at 3:00 p.m. with an artist reception through 7 p.m. at Coast Salish Creations.  There will also be a traditional and contemporary Native fashion show at 3:30 p.m. featuring hand-appliqued designs by SiLowLeetSa with accessories by more than a dozen artists. Salish Stories runs through February 28. The gallery is located at 424 W. Bakerview Road #102 in Bellingham, Washington. For more information call (360) 922-7902 or visit the gallery on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Coast-Salish-Creations/483867848318603?fref=ts

Friday, November 30, 2012

New Northwest Native Art Gallery Opens Just in Time for the Holidays

Handmade Native American cedar and
button blanket ornaments make a
wonderful addition to a holiday tree
at Coast Salish Creations
(Photo: Paul Niemi)
I'm never one to let the holidays make me crazy.  My family gave up gift giving years ago, so we could focus on the real meaning--the religious and sentimental aspects--of the holidays.  Recently, a new career job came my way, and I am very blessed to have it. I couldn't be more excited about it because it gives me the opportunity to reach a wider scope of people in a way I never have before.  It has made me "mad" busy, but that's okay!
No matter how busy things seem to be, I always have time to learn more about Native American art--reading, collecting and hitting every new art gallery that hits the scene.  Usually, I have to travel 90 miles south to Seattle or 50 miles north to Vancouver to find quality Native art.  The search in my own backyard is over since SiLowLeetSa (Doralee Sanchez), a master weaver, artist and educator from the Lummi Nation near Bellingham, Washington is opening her own new gallery in a wonderful location with easy access for visitors!
Coast Salish Creations, located at 424 W. Bakerview Road (near Northwest Avenue) will have its Grand Opening on Saturday, December 1 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.   The day will be filled with music, free frybread, art demonstrations and a contemporary fashion show with gorgeous designs by Althea Wilson. Sanchez, who has been making art her entire life is thrilled that she has finally arrived at the point in her life where she can fulfill her dream of opening an art gallery.  Years of work, schlepping her stuff from show to show, selling at Pike Place Market on Seattle's waterfront finally caught up with her and she decided she wanted a place, close to home, close to family and her people where she could set down her load (and vast inventory!) to make art full-time.
Sanchez, who comes from long line of Lummi artists, represents the work of 21 people from mostly the Lummi and Nooksack Nations.  She hopes to add more art from other Northwest tribes. Her passion is educating both Native and non-Native people about the value and beauty of tribal art and wants people to know the "gifts" that regularly come out of the Lummi Reservation. 
Handsewn pouches made from wool
Pendleton blankets and Lummi cedar baskets
are a few holiday gift items at
Coast Salish Creations
Speaking of gifts, if you are holiday shopping soon and want something truly unique, the gallery offers many items from $5 up into the thousands.  My personal favorites are the sweet and impeccably-made miniature Lummi baskets, small zipper pouches that Sanchez sews herself from wool Pendleton blankets, beautifully made woven cedar and button blanket tree ornaments, as well as woven cedar hats by artists such as Ethel Warbus.  One even comes with its own woven mannequin head for just under $700!
Coast Salish Creations will offer classes in various disciplines, including basket and hat weaving on an ongoing basis.   Sanchez's goal is to open the gallery up to young people to nurture their abilities, spark new ones and teach them that their utilitarian "art" has value and much beauty to the world beyond the reservation.

Watch a video about the Grand Opening of Coast Salish Creations HERE: