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Native Artist Business Workshop I

November 8, 2016/in /by Curator1

This workshop is designed to assist Native Artists in traditional and new business methods with specific examples and ways to market themselves. Learn the basics to marketing strategies and financial planning. Attendees can sign up for either or both workshops.

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If you’re interested in signing up please contact Lynda Romero at 505.455.5047 or via email: lromero@pojoaque.org

Guest Instructor: Nocona Burgess
3615-nocona_burgessNOCONA BURGESS – “I am Comanche from Lawton Oklahoma. I am the great-great grandson of Chief Quanah Parker, on my mother LaNora Parker Burgess’ side of the family. My father, Ronald Burgess, is also former chief of the Comanche tribe. I have one younger brother, Quanah Parker Burgess, who is also an artist.

Throughout my life I have traveled around the country with my family. I have lived in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Poplar, Montana; Phoenix, Arizona; and Santa Fe, New Mexico. We traveled a lot while my parents were working on their degrees. Many opportunities allowed us to see and experience much of the country and all the different kinds of people. That is what my parents wanted to give to my brother and me to expand our thinking.

I have always been around art. My dad went to school for art and education and has always painted and drawn. My maternal grandfather, Simmons Parker, was an artist, as was my maternal grandmother, Ina Parker, a quilt maker of her own designs. My great-grandmother, Daisy Tachaco, who raised my father, was an accomplished bead worker despite being blind. With all this art and all these artists around me, I had no choice but to pursue art. It was in my blood.

In 1989, after a year at the University of Oklahoma, I decided to move to New Mexico, where I stumbled upon the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) in Santa Fe. I could draw and had painted a bit. I was pretty good and, because of my family, more advanced than most in my classes. At IAIA my art really took off. I had a good time and learned a lot about Native art and how the traditional forms had evolved into more contemporary styles. This is what really grabbed my attention. I had already known quite a bit about traditional style. I grew up knowing people like Doc Tate Nevaquaya, Rance Hood, Allen Houser, and reading about Oklahoma artists like Woody Crumbo and Kiowa 5. I liked the idea of modern Indians; after all that’s who I am. I loved the old style, but it seemed so distant to me. To this day I enjoy painting old portraits and traditional subjects, but in my own style. In a way, when I paint them the subjects speak to me and I get to know them. After looking at them over and over for hours, how can I not receive something from them? My painting is a way of saying thank you to them for all of their sacrifices.

In 1991, I graduated from IAIA with an Associate in Fine Arts degree. I then went on to the University of New Mexico. I found myself questioning whether art was the way to go. Could I make a living at it? I knew some people did, but they always seemed the exception to the rule. I continued on with my degree with an emphasis in both studio art and native art history.

I began work at a bingo hall, soon to be a casino. This is when I started to drift away from art. I got promoted and made my way into management. It was pretty cool and the money was really nice; it felt good not to be a broke college student any more. From 1991 to 1996, I worked in the casino. My work schedule left no time for school and definitely no time for art. I missed the art, but soon learned to live without it. I was successful and making a good living.

In 1996, I decided the casino was not for me and I left. I needed a new start so I moved back to Oklahoma. I got back in touch with my people and family. I needed to get back to my art. It was 1997, and I hadn’t worked on any art for years. I enrolled at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma (USAO) to work on my B.F.A. There I started taking classes again and getting back into the flow. Art was back in my life.

I met my wife, Danielle, at USAO. She is also an artist and is very supportive of my art. After graduation in 1999, we were married and moved back to Santa Fe. I began painting and things started to work out. I started to get into shows and to sell my paintings again. My art opened doors. My first show was at Red Earth in Oklahoma City. In 2000, my brother and I were asked to be in a show in Holland, and from there the show traveled to Belgium and Germany.

I know now that this is where I need to be in my life. I have come full circle and my passion for painting is alive in my soul again. I have started writing music and poetry too. In July 2001, I put out a CD of my flute music.”

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/37ff6327-ff75-4c8c-8a0f-e2895ae90e39.jpg 291 612 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-10-31 10:28:512016-10-31 10:44:50Native Artist Business Workshop I

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Potters Gathering

October 22, 2016/in Poeh Event/by Curator1

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery

The Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd.

The People’s Pottery Exhibit, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center, 15 miles north of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Organized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country.

Organizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery, some of which has been gone for over a century.

A free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday, October 21, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase, created to benefit the exhibition.

The evening dinner will cost $20 per person, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP.

As part of the exhibit’s launch, Saturday, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project.

More information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter.

Friday, October 21
2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening
Free Admission. Refreshments Served.

6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening
$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances.

Saturday, October 22
9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering
9:30-Noon: Potters Only
Lunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome
Free Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances.

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Peoples-Pottery-Invitations.jpg 825 1275 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-10-20 20:32:512016-10-20 20:32:51IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Potters Gathering

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Evening Celebration

October 21, 2016/in Poeh Event/by Curator1

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery

The Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd.

The People’s Pottery Exhibit, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center, 15 miles north of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Organized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country.

Organizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery, some of which has been gone for over a century.

A free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday, October 21, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase, created to benefit the exhibition.

The evening dinner will cost $20 per person, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP.

As part of the exhibit’s launch, Saturday, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project.

More information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter.

Friday, October 21
2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening
Free Admission. Refreshments Served.

6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening
$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances.

Saturday, October 22
9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering
9:30-Noon: Potters Only
Lunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome
Free Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances.

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Peoples-Pottery-Invitations.jpg 825 1275 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-10-20 20:28:162016-10-20 20:28:16IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Evening Celebration

THE HOMECOMING OF THE PEOPLE’S POTTERY

September 28, 2016/in News/by Curator1
Read more
https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Smithsonian-Tewa-Pottery-Flyer.jpg 5325 3525 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-09-28 15:42:312022-01-28 16:58:23THE HOMECOMING OF THE PEOPLE’S POTTERY

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Exhibit Opening

October 21, 2016/in Poeh Event/by Curator1

IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery

The Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd.

The People’s Pottery Exhibit, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center, 15 miles north of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Organized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country.

Organizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery, some of which has been gone for over a century.

A free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday, October 21, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase, created to benefit the exhibition.

The evening dinner will cost $20 per person, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP.

As part of the exhibit’s launch, Saturday, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project.

More information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter.

Friday, October 21
2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening
Free Admission. Refreshments Served.

6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening
$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances.

Saturday, October 22
9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering
9:30-Noon: Potters Only
Lunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome
Free Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances.

 

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Cover-Image.jpg 1650 2550 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-08-24 21:10:062016-10-20 20:26:06IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Exhibit Opening

Arts Classes Begins

September 6, 2016/in /by Curator1

POEH ARTS: Fall Semester

Traditional & Cultural Art Classes

Pueblo Pottery | Jewelry | Sculpture

Wood working | Moccasin Making

See >>> https://poehcenter.org/arts/classes/

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/13923370_1200740269977984_1713259933732573355_o.jpg 1028 800 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-07-22 16:51:352016-08-24 21:08:44Arts Classes Begins

Cumulus

August 20, 2016/in /by Curator1

Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino and presents Cumulus, the accumulation of dance, art and fashion party on Saturday night of Sant Fe Indian Market. We party til 4am in the morning with featured native DJs spinning all night.

Featuring: DJ Element & DJ Abel
Hip Hop Artist: Nataanii Means
Host: Bobby Wison
Photobooth: Larry Price Photographer
Native Apparel Fashion Show: OXDX, Doug Miles, Ishkiin & Randy L. Barton
Native Artist Live Demos: Melissa Cody & Doug Miles
Native Truck Show

www.BUFFALOTHUNDER.com | 21+ Event | $10

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Cumulus-2016-Flyer.jpg 3583 2559 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-07-22 16:34:012016-08-15 13:27:47Cumulus

Youth Art Workshops

August 19, 2016/in /by Curator1

 

Poeh will be having youth art workshops during the week of Indian Market week. Save the date with us! Schedule below:

Screen Printing| Stencil Art | Hoop Dancing | Aerosol Art


3:30 -Screen Printing with David Sloan
4:30 -Stencil Art with Douglas Miles
5:30 -Aerosol Art with Dwayne Manuel & Breeze
6:30 -Hoop Dancing with Yellow Bird Dancers

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/IM-Poeh-Friday.jpg 3300 2550 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-07-22 16:17:232016-08-15 12:04:57Youth Art Workshops

Coming Home Exhibition

August 18, 2016/in /by Curator1

Museum Exhibition Opening Reception: 8/18/16 from 4-7pm
Traditional Dances, Pottery Demos & Free Food

We welcome the public to join us in celebrating the begining of the Coming Home Project which aims to provide access and study to historic cultural collections of Tewa people. For over a century many cultural items have been collected and dispersed away from their communities – the Poeh Cultural Center works to regather these items and bring them home through exhibitions and long-term relationships. The “Coming Home Project” exhibition will display the history of Tewa Pueblo arts collecting, where they have gone and how it has evolved.

(Upcoming)
Chapter I of this project an ongoing partnership with the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian. Slated for arrival in October 2016, nine (9) historic Tewa pots will be installed for long-term loan to the Poeh Cultural Center. The nine pots will be joined by an addition 91 pots, at a future date, to compete the exhibit of 100 historic Tewa pottery.

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/IM-Poeh-Thurs.jpg 3300 2550 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-07-22 16:13:332016-08-15 12:02:35Coming Home Exhibition

Community Workshops:

March 19, 2016/in /by Curator1

Children's Activity Day FlyerChildren’s Activity Day at the Poeh

10 – 11 am            Easy Clay/Advanced Chalk Drawing

11 am – 12 pm     Advanced Clay/Easy Chalk Drawing

12 pm – 1 pm       Lunch

12:30 pm              Performance by the POP Hoop Dancers

1 pm – 2 pm        Hoop Dance Workshop I & II

https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png 0 0 Curator1 https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/POEH-LOGO-black-300x195.png Curator12016-02-29 10:28:312016-03-04 09:52:07Community Workshops:
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Poeh Museum: Monday-Friday 10:00am to 5:00pm

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Email: info@poehcenter.org

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