The Oklahoman

OKC museum shines light on ‘Matriarchs of Oklahoma Native Art’

- Brandy McDonnell

To honor the “Matriarchs of Oklahoma Native Art” who have been “Lighting Pathways” over the past four decades, an exhibition at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is digging into the past.

In the 1970s, contempora­ry Native art began to surge in popularity, as major museums organized exhibition­s, the Cherokee Heritage Center near Tahlequah launched its prestigiou­s Trail of Tears Art Show, and the Institute of American Indian Arts was founded in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

But something was missing from the movement.

“You might see Harry Fonseca or you might see T.C. Cannon or Fritz Scholder. But, like today, the art field was very dominated by male artists,” said Tahnee Ahtone, a Kiowa, Seminole and Muscogee curator.

“The female artists, they were still having to maintain their day jobs, they were still maintainin­g to be parents, and also to have an art career. And there was a very strong influence within galleries in the market to pay the female artists less than their male peers ... even though the women were creating just as elaborate art.”

So, her aunt Virginia Stroud, a Keetoowah Cherokee and Muscogee painter, helped organize in 1985 the groundbrea­king traveling exhibition “Daughters of the Earth.” Featuring works by eight Oklahoma Native American women artists, the exhibit launched in Oklahoma City on a three-year tour across the country, according to The Oklahoman Archives.

The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is celebratin­g the “Daughters of the Earth” trailblaze­rs, along with three of their fellow Oklahoma Native women artists, in its exhibit “Lighting Pathways: Matriarchs of Oklahoma Native Art.”

“They had an impact on the Native American art movement across the country (as) Oklahoma is the heart of Native America,” said Eric Singleton, the museum's curator of ethnology. “It was really important to put these artists in a place where people could see their work again — and see it in the context of the individual artists and not some larger show. It's just about them.”

‘Lighting Pathways’ pays tribute to living Native women artists from Oklahoma

On view through April 28, “Lighting Pathways” is paying tribute to seven living women who overcame significant challenges and emerged as influential artists in the late 20th-century Oklahoma Native American art scene. It is curated by Ahtone and America Meredith, who is Cherokee.

The exhibit features works by Stroud; her sister, Sharron Ahtone Harjo, who is Kiowa; Mary Adair, who is Cherokee; Allie Chaddleson­e, who is Kootenai; Ruthe Blalock Jones, who is Shawnee, Delaware and Peoria; Brenda Kennedy, who is Citizen Potawatomi; and Jane Osti, who is Cherokee.

Although some of the artists featured in the 1980s exhibit have died, Jones, Adair, Ahtone Harjo and Stroud were part of “Daughters of the Earth.”

“This is to remind the arts community that these women contribute­d in this way, during a time period that many of us have probably fallen asleep on. ... Back then, there really wasn't a living time stamp on them that lived on the internet or within archives. Even though we share these memories with one another in the community, we wanted to make sure that we still celebrated them,” said Tahnee Ahtone, the daughter of Ahtone Harjo.

“We included Brenda Kennedy, along with Allie Chaddleson­e ... and Jane Osti, for their contributi­ons as somewhat the generation following the ‘Daughters of the Earth.'”

Here's what to know about the seven artists included in “Lighting Pathways: Matriarchs of Oklahoma Native Art:”

Sharron Ahtone Harjo (Kiowa)

Kiowa artist Sharron Ahtone Harjo, also known as Marcelle Sharron Ahtone Harjo, has devoted her career to reviving and ensuring the continuati­on of ledger art, a Native narrative pictorial style of painting on paper or muslin. She and her adopted sister, Virginia Stroud, were instrument­al in bringing back ledger art in the 1970s with encouragem­ent from Kiowa elders and their teacher, Cheyenne artist Dick West, at Bacone College.

After graduating from Bacone, she served as Miss Indian American 1965 and earned her bachelor's degree from Northeaste­rn State University in Tahlequah. In 1978, she helped establish the Center for the American Indian in OKC.

The Oklahoma City resident is also a longtime arts educator who taught in many schools nationwide, including at the Concho Indian Boarding School before taking a position in Edmond Public Schools. She was honored at the 2024 Oklahoma Governor's Arts Awards as one of five recipients of the Arts in Education Award.

Virginia Stroud (Keetoowah Cherokee/Muscogee)

Virginia Stroud, who is Keetoowah Cherokee and Muscogee and lives in Tahlequah, is considered one of America's foremost female contempora­ry Native painters.

Born in California, she was just 11 when her mother died, and the future artist moved to Muskogee, where she studied at Bacone. Jacob and Evelyn Ahtone (Kiowa) adopted Stoud, and she and her adopted sister, Ahtone Harjo, were key in reviving ledger art in the 1960s and ‘70s.

Mary Adair (Cherokee Nation)

Cherokee Nation artist Mary Adair, who lives near Sallisaw, was born on her grandparen­ts' Oklahoma allotment in Oklahoma and immersed in Cherokee history by her relatives. She started in oils and then moved to watercolor­s, painting her version of the flatstyle painting that West taught her at Bacone. In the first art show she ever entered, the 1967 Philbrook Indian Annual in Tulsa, she won a prize.

Teaching and mentoring youth took precedence over her own art career, but she exhibited her work throughout Oklahoma and nationwide. Along with painting, Adair crafted moccasins, shawls and finger-woven sashes for her family and other Cherokee youth, eventually winning in New Mexico a Santa Fe Indian Market award for fashion.

Brenda Kennedy (Citizen Potawatomi)

Citizen Potawatomi artist Brenda Kennedy, also known as Brenda Kennedy Grummer, is arguably best known for her naturalist­ic acrylic paintings of powwows but has experiment­ed with many styles.

She reconnecte­d with her Potawatomi community as a young adult and attended dances in Shawnee and throughout the state. She's won numerous awards, including the Grand Awards at the last Philbrook Indian Annual in 1979. Her work is in several public collection­s, including the Citizen Potawatomi Nation Cultural Heritage Center.

Jane Osti (Cherokee Nation)

Cherokee Nation potter Jane Osti, of Tahlequah, creates utilitaria­n vessels as well as more experiment­al and sculptural works. She has always combined Cherokee and Southeaste­rn iconograph­y with her observatio­ns of the natural world and geometric abstractio­ns. She hand-coils her clay forms, which she can fire outdoors or in a kiln.

Receiving almost no art education in rural Oklahoma, where she grew up, Osti discovered art in California and returned to the Cherokee Nation to earn a master's degree in art from Northeaste­rn State University. Osti apprentice­d with Cherokee Nation artist Anna Bell Sixkiller Mitchell, who revived ceramics among Oklahoma Cherokee, and in turn taught subsequent generation­s of ceramics artists.

Allie Chaddleson­e (Kootenai)

Adeline “Allie” Chaddleson­e did not know of any women who sculpted in stone when she became an artist, but she watched men carve stone and knew she could do it, too. She not only taught herself to carve stone but also quarried her own alabaster near Anadarko.

Born in Ktunaxa territory in British Columbia, Chaddleson­e grew up in the Kalispel Reservatio­n in Washington. Kalispel was her first language. She studied modern dance and two-dimensiona­l art at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, where she met her husband, Kiowa artist Sherman Chaddleson­e (1947-2013).

Ruthe Blalock Jones (Shawnee/Delaware/Peoria)

At age 13, Ruthe Blalock Jones, who is Shawnee, Delaware and Peoria, first entered a painting in the Philbrook Indian Annual in Tulsa. Her painting won an award, and famed Muscogee artist Acee Blue Eagle purchased it, launching her career as a painter and printmaker. Her graceful figurative works evolved from the heavily contoured Bacon school style.

Born in Claremore, Jones is an internatio­nally known artist, educator and art historian and was named the 2011 Honored One at the Red Earth Festival. She lives in Okmulgee and has exhibited her work on four continents.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? “Mine” left, and “Fancy Dancer” by Brenda Kennedy, who is Citizen Potawatomi, are on view in the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN “Mine” left, and “Fancy Dancer” by Brenda Kennedy, who is Citizen Potawatomi, are on view in the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
 ?? ?? An untitled stone sculpture by Allie Chaddleson­e, who is Kootenai, is on view at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
An untitled stone sculpture by Allie Chaddleson­e, who is Kootenai, is on view at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States