ARCHITECTS AND DESIGNERS
Golden Dawn Gallery Pablita Velarde
Pablita Velarde - "Tse Tsan" (Golden Dawn) - Tewa Painter 1918 - 2006
Born at Santa Clara Pueblo in 1918, Pablita Velarde was the first
female student to study under Dorothy Dunn at the Santa Fe Indian
School. After her enrollment in 1932, Pablita’s classmates included
Allan Houser, Karl Gorman, Fred Kabotie, Narcisco Abeyta, Ben Quintana,
Harrison Begay, Joe H. Herrera, Quincy Tahoma, Andy Tsihnajinnie, Eva
Mirabel, Tonita Lujan, Pop Chalee, Oscar Howe, and Geronima Cruz
Montoya. Many of these individuals became iconic Native artists, but it
was Allan Houser and Pablita Velarde who had the strongest impact on
the art world over their long careers. As a 16 year old, Pablita
painted a mural for the 1934 Chicago World’s Fair. She was the W.P.A.
artist in residence during the construction of Bandelier National
Monument. Winning virtually every Native art award, many times over,
she has had a place in most major Native museum shows and private
collections in America. In 1953, she was the first woman to receive the
Grand Purchase Award at the Philbrook Museum of Art’s Annual Exhibition
of Contemporary Indian Painting. The French government honored her with
the 1954 Palmes Académiques for excellence in art. In 1959 her book Old Father Story Teller
made her the first Pueblo woman to be published. Widely recognized by
collectors and museums alike as the most important Native female
painter, she painted up to her death in 2006. Without question, she is
one of the most culturally significant female painters born in America
in the last 100 years.
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