Beginning in 1962 the Institute of American Indian Arts Supported Native American Students in

Public tribal college in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Constitute of American Indian Arts (IAIA)
Blazon Public tribal state-grant college
Established 1962
Affiliation AIHEC
President Robert Martin
Location

Santa Atomic number 26

,

New Mexico

,

United States


35°35′13″N 106°00′36″W  /  35.587°N 106.010°W  / 35.587; -106.010 Coordinates: 35°35′xiii″N 106°00′36″W  /  35.587°N 106.010°W  / 35.587; -106.010
Colors Silver & Turquoise
Mascot Thunderbird
Website www.iaia.edu

Federal Edifice

U.S. National Register of Celebrated Places

Northward.Grand. Country Register of Cultural Properties

Post Office and Government building, Santa Fe, New Mexico.jpg

20th Century postcard depicting the Federal Building

Institute of American Indian Arts is located in New Mexico

Institute of American Indian Arts

Show map of New Mexico

Institute of American Indian Arts is located in the United States

Institute of American Indian Arts

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Location 108 Cathedral Identify at Palace St., Santa Iron, New United mexican states
Coordinates 35°41′13″N 105°56′11″Westward  /  35.68694°N 105.93639°W  / 35.68694; -105.93639
Expanse 1 acre (0.twoscore ha)
Built 1920 (1920)
Architectural manner Pueblo
NRHP referenceNo. 74001207[i]
NMSRCPNo. 874
Significant dates
Added to NRHP August 15, 1974
Designated NMSRCP June four, 1982
Institute of American Indian Arts

The Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) is a public tribal country-grant college in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The college focuses on Native American fine art. Information technology operates the Museum of Gimmicky Native Arts (MoCNA), which is housed in the celebrated Santa Atomic number 26 Federal Edifice (the onetime Post Office), a landmark Pueblo Revival building listed on the National Register of Celebrated Places as Federal Building. The museum houses the National Drove of Contemporary Indian Art, with more than 7,000 items.

History [edit]

The Institute of American Indian Arts was co-founded by Lloyd Kiva New (Cherokee, 1916–2002) and Dr. George Boyce in 1962 with funding from the Bureau of Indian Affairs.[2] The school was founded upon the recommendation of the BIA Department of Teaching and the Indian Arts and crafts Board. Three factors led to the school'southward founding: growing dissatisfaction with the academic programme at the Santa Fe Indian School, the BIA'southward emerging interest in college education, and the influence of the Southwest Indian Art Projection and the Rockefeller Foundation.

IAIA began on the SFIS campus in Oct 1962. From 1962 to 1979, IAIA ran a high schoolhouse program, and began offering higher- and graduate-level fine art courses in 1975. In 1986, the Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts Development was congressionally chartered as a nonprofit organization, like to the construction of the Smithsonian Institution, which separated the school from the BIA. It was designated a land-grant college in 1994 aslope 31 other tribal colleges.[3] In 2001, the school was accredited, including the accreditation of four yr degrees. A two-yr low-residency MFA in artistic writing was accredited in 2013.

Today, IAIA sits on a 140-acre (57 ha) campus 12 miles (19 km) south of downtown Santa Iron and also operates the Museum of Contemporary Native Art, which is located in Santa Fe Plaza, every bit well as the Center for Lifelong Education.

IAIA Museum of Gimmicky Native Arts [edit]

IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Atomic number 26, 2004

In 1991 the college founded the Constitute of American Indian Arts Museum, at present the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA), in downtown Santa Fe, with a focus on contemporary intertribal Native American art, the MoCNA is housed in the celebrated Santa Fe Federal Edifice (the old Mail service Office), a landmark Pueblo Revival edifice listed on the National Register of Celebrated Places.[four] The museum also features the Allan Houser Sculpture Garden.

Partnerships [edit]

IAIA is a member of the American Indian Higher Pedagogy Consortium, which includes tribally and federally chartered institutions working to strengthen tribal nations and make a divergence in the lives of American Indians and Alaska Natives. IAIA generally serves geographically isolated populations of Native Americans that have few other means of accessing pedagogy across the high school level.[5]

During the early 1970s, faculty member Ed Wapp, Jr.'s E-Yah-Pah-Hah Chanters toured nationally with the Hanay Geiogamah's American Indian Theatre Ensemble, a company in residence at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York City.[6] A plan from this bout describes the musical ensemble as "students from the Constitute of American Indian Arts at Santa Fe, N.M., and are under the direction of Ed Wapp, Jr. Their music is presented in both the traditional and gimmicky American Indian forms. Songs are selected from the Plains, Eastern, Great Bowl, Southwest and Northwest Coast areas of Indian State."[7]

Notable faculty [edit]

  • Imogene Goodshot Arquero, beadwork creative person
  • Louis West. Ballard, Quapaw/Cherokee composer
  • Gregory Cajete, Santa Clara Pueblo ethnobiologist and author
  • Karita Coffey, Comanche ceramist
  • Jon Davis, European-American poet
  • Lois Ellen Frank, cultural anthropologist and food historian[viii]
  • Allan Houser, Chiricahua Apache sculptor
  • Charles Loloma, Hopi jeweler
  • Otellie Loloma, Hopi potter, sculptor, painter
  • Linda Lomahaftewa, Hopi/Choctaw printmaker
  • Larry McNeil, Tlingit/Nisga'a photographer
  • N. Scott Momaday, Kiowa writer
  • Josephine Myers-Wapp, Comanche material artist
  • Wendy Ponca, Osage Nation fashion designer and textile artist
  • Fritz Scholder, Luiseño painter
  • Arthur Sze, Chinese-American poet
  • James Thomas Stevens, Akwesasne Mohawk poet and writer
  • Azalea Thorpe; an accolade for the fiber arts plan is named in her honor[9]
  • Charlene Teters, Spokane painter and installation artist
  • Gerald Vizenor, White Earth Ojibwe writer
  • Ed Wapp, Jr. musician; son of Josephine Myers-Wapp
  • Will Wilson, Diné photographer
  • Elizabeth Woody, Navajo/Tenino (Warm Springs)/Wasco-Yakama artist and author
  • Melanie Yazzie, Navajo printmaker
  • William S. Yellow Robe, Jr., Assiniboine author

Notable alumni [edit]

  • Marcus Amerman, Choctaw Nation beadwork artist
  • Ralph Aragon, Pueblo painter and sculptor
  • Alexandra Backford, Aleut painter
  • Esther Belin, Diné multimedia artist and author
  • Sherwin Bitsui, Navajo poet
  • Diane Burns, Anishinaabe/Chemehuevi poet
  • Jackie Larson Bread, Blackfoot beadwork artist
  • T.C. Cannon (Kiowa/Caddo, 1946–1978), painter and printmaker
  • Sherman Chaddlesone (Kiowa, 1947–2013), painter
  • Eddie Chuculate, Muscogee/Cherokee writer and journalist
  • Kelly Church building, Odawa/Ojibwe/Potawatomi handbasket maker, birchbark biter
  • Karita Coffey, Comanche ceramic artist
  • Bunky Echo-Hawk, Pawnee/Yakama painter
  • Anita Fields, Osage/Muskogee ceramicist
  • Pecker Drinking glass Jr., Cherokee Nation ceramic artist and sculptor
  • Gina Gray (Osage, 1954–2014), printmaker and painter
  • Benjamin Harjo Jr., Shawnee/Seminole painter and printmaker
  • Joy Harjo, Muscogee poet and jazz musician, US Poet Laureate
  • Allison Hedge Coke, American author
  • Kevin Locke, Lakota/Anishinaabe hoop dancer
  • Gerald McMaster, Plains Cree Siksika First Nation author, artist, and curator
  • Melissa Melero-Moose, Northern Paiute/Modoc mixed-media creative person, curator, and cofounder of the Cracking Basin Native Artists
  • America Meredith, Cherokee Nation painter, printmaker, and curator
  • Dan Namingha, Hopi-Tewa painter and sculptor
  • Jody Naranjo, Santa Clara Pueblo potter
  • Jamie Okuma, Luiseño/Shoshone-Bannock beadwork artist and style designer
  • Tommy Orange, Cheyenne-Arapaho acknowledged novelist
  • Mary Gay Osceola, Seminole painter and printmaker
  • Chris Pappan (Kaw/Osage/Cheyenne River Lakota), ledger artist
  • Kevin Red Star, Crow painter
  • Layli Long Soldier, Oglala Lakota poet, writer, and creative person.
  • James Thomas Stevens, Akwesasne Mohawk poet
  • Roxanne Swentzell, Santa Clara Pueblo ceramic artist and sculptor
  • Charlene Teters, Spokane painter and installation artist
  • Randy'L He-dow Teton, Shoshone-Bannock model for Sacajawea Gold Dollar money
  • Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Seminole/Muscogee/Diné lensman, writer, curator, and educator
  • Marty Two Bulls Sr, Lakota artist[10]
  • Marie Watt, Seneca textile artist, printmaker and conceptual artist
  • Terese Marie Mailhot, Sto:lo author
  • Jolene Yazzie, Navajo graphic designer
  • Debra Yepa-Pappan, Jemez Pueblo/Korean digital multimedia creative person and museum professional
  • Alfred Beau, PhD (Chippewa-Cree), painter, writer, professor
  • Vernon Bigman, Abstruse Painter

Notable assistants and staff [edit]

  • Lloyd Kiva New (Cherokee, 1916–2002), co-founder and president
  • Joseph Sanchez, curator and artist, i of the Indian Group of 7
  • Duane Slick, (built-in 1961) painter, taught at IAIA from 1992 until 1995.

See as well [edit]

  • C.N. Gorman Museum, like to the IAIA Museum of Gimmicky Native Arts, and has a gimmicky intertribal Native fine art focus.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "National Annals Information Organization". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Lloyd Kiva New, 86, Teacher of Indian Arts". New York Times. 10 February 2002. Retrieved eleven February 2016.
  3. ^ "NIFA 1994s The First twenty Years of the 1994 Country-Grant Institutions Standing on Tradition, Embracing the Futurity" (PDF). National Plant of Food and Agronomics. September 25, 2015. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  4. ^ "National Register of Historical Places - NEW MEXICO (NM), Santa Iron Canton". www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com . Retrieved 2018-05-14 .
  5. ^ American Indian College Education Consortium Archived 2012-06-fourteen at the Wayback Automobile
  6. ^ La MaMa Archives Digital Collections. "Tour: American Indian Theatre Ensemble US Bout (Feb-Apr 1973)". Accessed May fourteen, 2018.
  7. ^ La MaMa Archives Digital Collections. "Program: Na Haaz Zan and Torso Indian (1972)". Accessed May 14, 2018.
  8. ^ "Foods of the Southwest Indian Nations". Penguin Random House. Retrieved half dozen November 2019.
  9. ^ Kleinfeld, Judith S.; Wescott, Siobhan (1993). Fantastic Antone succeeds!: experiences in educating children with fetal alcohol syndrome. Fairbanks, Alaska: University of Alaska Press. p. 55. ISBN0-912006-71-four.
  10. ^ Wargo, Abby (2021-07-21). "Oglala Lakota cartoonist named Pulitzer Prize finalist". Rapid Urban center Journal . Retrieved 2022-04-xv .

External links [edit]

  • Official website

collinsbrour1950.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_of_American_Indian_Arts

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