Albuquerque Journal

Indian Market’s exclusions are a pity

Some Native artists are no longer allowed to sell at Santa Fe event

- BY CALEB R. TROTTER ATTORNEY, PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION Caleb R. Trotter represente­d Peggy Fontenot in her successful challenge to the Oklahoma American Indian Arts and Crafts Sales Act.

American Indian artist Peggy Fontenot, a member of the Patawomeck tribe, makes a living by selling her black-and-white photograph­y and intricate beadwork at American Indian art markets across the country. A devotee of traditiona­l techniques, she has received multiple awards at leading markets like the Autry Museum of the American West in Los Angeles and the Heard Museum in Arizona, as well as at the Santa Fe Indian Market, where she’s displayed and sold her work for years.

But recent changes in the Santa Fe Indian Market’s eligibilit­y rules mean Fontenot and artists like her can no longer participat­e. These new rules, which took effect sometime in the last year without explanatio­n or warning, are not only unfair — they also conflict with the spirit of federal and New Mexico law.

Fontenot’s situation is particular­ly vexing since just weeks ago she prevailed in a court challenge to a similarly unfair Oklahoma law that restricted her rights to free expression and to make a living. Despite that victory, she still finds herself blocked from selling her artwork in some American Indian marketplac­es.

Under the Southweste­rn Associatio­n for Indian Arts’ (SWAIA) new rules, only members of federally recognized tribes are permitted to display at the Santa Fe market. The problem is that Fontenot is a member of the state-recognized Patawomeck tribe in Virginia and certified as an artisan by the federally recognized Citizen Potawatomi Nation.

Under the federal Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990, artists can label their art as “Indian-made” so long as they are a member of a federally or state-recognized tribe, or certified as an artisan by a tribe. Congress deliberate­ly included certified artisans and members of state-recognized tribes, because it understood that there are numerous legitimate artists who for one valid reason or another are not members of federally recognized tribes. Excluding them would put their livelihood­s at risk while doing nothing to protect the public from fraudulent artists.

Likewise, in enacting New Mexico’s own Indian Arts and Crafts Sales Act,

state lawmakers wisely drafted similar definition­s to include American Indian artists who are members of federally or state-recognized tribes.

To be sure, the federal and state laws do not require SWAIA, a private organizati­on, to include certified artisans or members of state-recognized tribes. Instead, the group is free to choose which artists to include, so long as it stays within the bounds of antidiscri­mination laws. But excluding certified artisans and members of state-recognized tribes violates the spirit of the more inclusive New Mexico and federal laws.

If the SWAIA rule were a law, it would almost certainly be struck down as unconstitu­tional. In 2016, Fontenot filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g an Oklahoma law that prohibited artists from marketing their art as American Indian-made unless they were members of federally recognized tribes. With help from attorneys at the nonprofit Pacific Legal Foundation, Fontenot argued that, in addition to conflictin­g with the federal Indian Arts and Crafts Act, the Oklahoma law restricted her right to speak truthfully about her art and infringed on her right to earn a living.

The Oklahoma law had no relationsh­ip to protecting the public; legislator­s who are citizens of the federally recognized Cherokee Nation, and who seek to protect members of their tribe from having to compete with artists like Fontenot, drafted the legislatio­n. Throughout the case, Oklahoma failed to produce any evidence that restrictin­g Fontenot or others from the market was necessary to protect the public from fraud. In fact, the law was pure protection­ism and a blatantly unconstitu­tional and improper use of the lawmaking process.

Fortunatel­y, in March the court ruled in Fontenot’s favor, striking down the Oklahoma law. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma agreed with Fontenot that the U.S. Constituti­on prohibits Oklahoma from undercutti­ng federal protection­s for certified artisans and members of state-recognized tribes for the benefit of politicall­y favored artists.

It is sad that, instead of bringing Native artists and art lovers together to celebrate their art and heritage, SWAIA has chosen to exclude deserving artists like Peggy Fontenot. If SWAIA truly believes its mission is to bring “Native arts to the world by inspiring artistic excellence, fostering education, and creating meaningful partnershi­ps,” then it should honor its past practices and embrace the inclusive spirit of federal and New Mexico law. Only then can everyone get back to focusing on the art and each other’s shared humanity.

 ?? JOURNAL ?? Thousands of people wander along the booths on Lincoln Avenue during the 96th annual Santa Fe Indian Market in August 2017.
JOURNAL Thousands of people wander along the booths on Lincoln Avenue during the 96th annual Santa Fe Indian Market in August 2017.

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