Wind River Reservation was not a Kiowa reservation, rather that of the Shoshone and Cheyenne. As a result, Greeves spent her time surrounded by the work of other tribes and learned a verity of cosmologies and cultures in addition to her Kiowa heritage. She grew up in her mother’s trading post, crawling around beadwork and other native art. She began learning beadwork at eight with the help of her aunties, Shoshone and Cheyenne women from the reservation. As a result, Greeves works with many different types of beading to create her art. Over the course of her studies, she attended UC Santa Cruz where she received a Bachelors of Arts in American Studies, St. John’s College and Cabrillo College. She now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, with her family, including her sons. Throughout her career as an artist, she has won numerous awards and honors, including at the Santa Fe Southwestern Association for Indian Arts’ show. In addition to creating beadwork, Greeves contributes to first American Art Magazine…
Maya Lin is the artist who uses landscaping and architecture to make her artwork she also uses a lot of natural materials. She is most famous from the Vietnam Veteran Memorial, located in Washington D.C. it has exactly 58,307 names including man and woman who have fought in the Vietnam War. My favorite piece that she made was The Women’s Table. The table is a fountain dedicated to the women at Yale University. When looking on top of the fountain, there are numbers in a spiral formation representing the women who have enrolled into Yale. The table is made out of green granite with a black granite base. When looking at the picture of the sculpture, the dark colors of the fountain are relaxing and…
The folk artist I would like to discuss is Clementine Hunter. She was born in 1886 on a cotton plantation in Cloutierville, Louisiana. Life on the plantation was hard on both the mind and body. Clementine didn't like school so she stopped going at an early age. She didn't have any educational background except life on the plantation. At the age of fifty-four, she was promoted from the fields to the house. The assistant of the house noticed her creativity right away through her chores of making dolls and clothing for the plantation owner's children. This led to her interest in art and everything is history from there. Her paintings were beautiful and her style was in a simple, straight forward way. She painted over 4,000 paintings in…
The collection of quilts from Gee's Bend was first shown at the Houston Museum of Art, before traveling to the Whitney Museum in New York, where high-acclaim continued to flow regarding the quilts. But the phenomena with these quilts is not without criticism. The show takes the women and the quilts out of the context of west Alabama, and has established serious academic discussions on the definition of…
Skywoman Falling, the first chapter of Robin Wall Kimmerer’s memoir Braiding Sweetgrass, is about the story of creation and what sweetgrass is. In the text, Kimmerer uses process analysis and description to evoke a feeling of connection and creativity.…
Del Kathryn Barton was born in 1972 in Sydney, NSW. She started drawing as a little child, much to her father’s discouragement. Barton suffered from sensory disorders when young, and found that drawing freed her mind of any issues or stress. She would have extreme episodes of anxiety that only withheld when she was drawing. Del Kathryn Barton felt connected to art, feeling as though she was drawing from a place of freedom. But, it was only in her first pregnancy that Barton took up painting.…
Y’all got to help me remember him good. Most of my quilts was made down South. My Mama and my Mama’s Mama taught me. Popped me on the tail if I missed a stitch or threw the pattern out of line. I did “Bright Star” and “Lonesome Square” and “Rally Round,”…
Charles Marion Russell was truly a notable creator and artist. Accomplished in not only one form of artistic creation, but excelled as a painter, illustrator, sculptor and writer. Born early in March 1864 on the edge of the western frontier in St. Louis, Missouri, a unique relationship with the wild American West sprouted. While in his youth, he gained a special love for the American West. Day dreams of the romantic life of cowboys and Indians filled his thoughts and sketchbooks. Daily, his desire would urge him into the rugged American West. Russell soon found himself deep within the Indian and cowboy rich state of Montana. While in Montana he learned the trade of the wrangler and ranch hand. Ever the artist at heart, Russell never abandoned his true love of sketching his new home and surroundings. This tutelage as a ranch hand, coupled with his ability to create would prove to be the perfect relationship for his later work as an artist.…
Betye Saar is an artist and educator born July 30, 1926 in Los Angeles, California. She grew up during the depression and learned as a child to recycle and reuse items. As a child, she and her siblings would go on “treasure hunts” in her grandmother’s backyard finding items that they thought were beautiful or interesting. With these items, Saar would make her own toys and gifts for her family. This was her first glimpse into the art world that she would later use to make her first piece of significant art (Saar, n.d).…
1. Emily Grierson –Emily was the daughter of a former leader from the town of Jefferson. She taught children to paint in china.…
The artist name is Judith Goldstein, a child Holocaust survivor, and she was born in Vilna, Poland. The name of her work of art is Joys and Sorrow. In 1941, the Nazis sent most of Vilna's Jews to the Ghetto where Judith and her family spent the next two years. Following the liquidation of the Ghetto in 1943, Judith and her mother spent the next two years in concentration camps in Latvia and Poland. Somehow, Judith, her mother, and her brother survived and were sent to a banished person’s camp in Germany in 1945. This is where she fell in love with the arts.…
Loretta Claiborne discussed many obstacles that individuals with disabilities constantly deal with. One of the main obstacles that individuals with intellectual disabilities have to deal with is being told what they cannot do and what they won’t achieve. That being placed in institutions and facilities is what’s best and the only option for them. Claiborne states that in order to overcome the naysayers, individuals with intellectual disabilities must develop a fearless attitude and mentality. Trust and hope in the continued processes and developments made for individuals with disabilities, is what’s need to succeed. Loretta states that they must fight to overcome bullies and be thankful that are organizations like the Special Olympics and Project…
The first artist I chose was Betsy Anderson because of all the bright colors and tranquil…
The piece of art that most stood out to me while visiting the California African American Museum in Exposition Park, in Los Angeles, was “The Sunflower Quilting Bee at Arles ”, created by Faith Ringgold in 1996. In the art piece, 8 influential African American throughout history from the 19th and 20th Century are sitting together in a field of sunflowers holding a beautiful quilt that they have made together. It is set in Vincent Van Gogh’s sunflower garden in Arles, France, thus Ringgold included Van Gogh in her picture as well.…
Betty’s Beautiful Baskets, a manufacturing business that sells baskets, wants a master budget prepared for the first three months of this year (January, February and March).…