Jaune Quick-to-See Smith – Habitat Isn’t Just for Wildlife

$1,200

SKU: 30009-1

Artwork Description

Jaune Quick-to-See Smith – Habitat Isn’t Just for Wildlife

Dimensions: 30 x 22″ unframed
Year: 2009
Medium: screenprint

About Jaune Quick-to-See Smith:

Jaune Quick-to-See Smith was born at the St. Ignatius Indian Mission on her reservation. She is an enrolled Salish member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Nation, Montana. Jaune was fundamental in the development of Institute for American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, and she has become the leading Native American woman artist on the international art scene.  Turner Carroll Gallery is thrilled to host this exhibition honoring Jaune, in conjunction with her career retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.

Quick-to-See Smith received an Associate of Arts Degree at Olympic College in Bremerton Washington, a BA in Art Education at Framingham State College, MA, and an MFA at the University of New Mexico. She is one of the most acclaimed American Indian artists today. Her artwork has been reviewed in most art periodicals. Smith has had over 100 solo exhibits in the past 40 years and has done printmaking projects nationwide.

Smith calls herself a cultural arts worker which is also apparent in her work. Elaborating on her Native worldview, Smith’s work addresses today’s tribal politics, human rights and environmental issues with humor. Critic Gerrit Henry, (Art in America 2001) wrote: “For all the primal nature of her origins, Smith adeptly takes on contemporary American society in her paintings, drawings and prints, looking at things Native and national through bifocals of the old and the new, the sacred and the profane, the divine and the witty.”

Smith has organized and/or curated over 30 Native exhibitions, lectured at more than 200 universities, museums and conferences internationally, including at 5 universities in China. She has completed several collaborative public art works such as the floor design in the Great Hall of the new Denver Airport; an in-situ sculpture piece in Yerba Buena Park, San Francisco and a mile-long sidewalk history trail in West Seattle.

Awards and Museum Collections/Exhibitions:

Smith has received awards such as the Academy of Arts and Letters Purchase Award, NY l987; the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters Grant 1996; the Women’s Caucus for the Arts Lifetime Achievement 1997; the College Art Association Women’s Award 2002; Governor’s Outstanding New Mexico Woman’s Award 2005; New Mexico Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts 2005. Art Table Artist Honoree, NY 2011; Visionary Woman Award 2011, Moore College, Phila. PA; Elected to National Academy of Art, NY 2011; Living Artist of Distinction Award, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, 2012; Switzer Distinguished Artist 2012; NAEA Ziegfeld Lecture Award 2014; The Woodson Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award 2015. She has been awarded four honorary doctorates: Minneapolis College of Art and Design 1992; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts 1998; Massachusetts College of Art 2003; and University of New Mexico, Albuquerque 2009.

Jaune’s artwork is in numerous museum collections: Museum of Modern Art, Quito, Ecuador; the Museum of Mankind, Vienna, Austria; The Walker, Minneapolis, MN; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC; the Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art,The Whitney Museum of American Art, NY; and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.