



Press Release
June 1, 2006 (Radio Actualities)
WINNERS OF SEALASKA JURIED ART SHOW ANNOUNCED
Six artists have taken top awards at the third
Sealaska Juried Art Competition in Juneau for best contemporary and
traditional Native art.
The winners, chosen by jurors Preston Singletary, a
Native glass artist, and Aldona Jonaitis, a Northwest Coast art scholar,
are:
Best of Show
- Copper Man - by
Clarissa Hudson
Traditional Art
- 1st
Place- “Fooled You Again” Raven Transformation Mask - by David A.
Boxley
- 2nd
Place- Frog Canoe Tackle Box - by David A. Boxley
- 3rd
Place- Diagonal Weave Basket - by Deborah Head
Contemporary Art
- 1st
Place- Tlingit; Portrait; Raven; & The Good Book - by Nicholas Galanin
- 2nd
Place- Tsirku River Robe - by Lani Hotch
- 3rd
Place- Smokey Mountain Memories - by Corey Stein
The following pieces also were selected for
inclusion in the show:
- Jeanine Clam Basket
- by Deborah Head
- Transitional
Ravenstail Rattle Top Basket - by Lorraine Kasko
- Fiddleheads - by
William Pfeifer
- Shamans Travel - by
Celeste Worl
- Ravenstail Robe - by
Pauline Duncan
- Octopus Woman Mask -
by David A. Boxley
- Fox on the Run - by
Corey Stein
- Progression - by
Nicholas Galanin
- What Ain’t to be
Just Might Happen - by Corey Stein
- A Little Bit of
Ridicule, How Will You Receive It - by Michael Dangeli
- Glacier Bay Story -
by William Pfeifer
- Thank You Halibut
People - by Chloe French
- Chaak Button Blanket
- by Ivan D. Williams
- Wolf Rattle - by
David A. Boxley
- Goad Lax Skeek;
Devoted to the Eagle Clan - by Michael Dangeli
- The Wolves Inside -
by Kimberly MacLoud
- Button Dance - by
Chloe French
- Strengthening My
Name Goothl Ts’imilx - by Michael Dangeli
- Big Grandma’s
Watching - by Deborah Head
- Ba’O; The Origin of
Mosquito - by Michael Dangeli
- Waltz of the Winds -
by Corey Stein
- Green, Green Grass
of Home - by Corey Stein
- Glass Ball, Open
Weave - by Deborah Head
- Majorie Young Hat -
by Deborah Head
Best of Show winner Clarissa Hudson said she wove
her piece while coping with an illness.
“Creating copper man
helped me, it was a process of coming back alive. I healed myself. And
I’m still processing that,” she said.
David Boxley won 1st and 2nd place in the
traditional category.
“Northwest Coast art,
especially the art from our area, from the Tsimshian, Tlingit and Haida
art, it’s the best in the world. It ranks right up there and surpasses
so many of the so-called ancient cultures -- with this understanding
that this type of art is still at a high level and increasing all the
time is a good thing for all artists," Boxley said.
Lani Hotch won 2nd place, contemporary, for her
Tsirku River Robe.
“I was pretty pleased
to place. It was my first juried art show that I entered and to get
second place I think is pretty good placing for my first try," Hotch
said.
Corey Stein won 3rd place in the contemporary
category for a series of beaded trees that illustrate a narrative about
fire.
“The beaded story I did
on these was about a grasshopper that started a forest fire down in
Washington State when he got electrocuted on a fence and I thought that
was really funny so I did a series of them. And they’re fire starters,
and if you open up -- there’s a little lock on the bottom and if you
open the lock, inside is wooden matches that if you strike them on a
rock, you’ll start a fire," Stein said.
Sealaska Heritage Institute (SHI) received applications from 18 Native
artists who submitted 59 pieces for consideration. Jurors chose 34
pieces by 14 artists for inclusion in the show. The prize for Best of
Show was $1,500, while prizes for 1st, 2nd and 3rd
place awards were $1,000, $750 and $500 respectively. The winners were
announced Wednesday, May 31, during an evening reception at Sealaska
Corp. The pieces will be exhibited in the lobby of Sealaska Plaza from 8
a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, June 1-July 9, and Saturday,
June 3. The show and competition are scheduled every two years to
coincide with Celebration, which runs June 1-3 this year.
SHI founded the biennial Juried Art Show and Competition in 2002 to
promote the development of Southeast Alaska Native arts. The goals of
the Juried Art Show are:
-To encourage and
enhance the creation and production of Southeast Alaska Native objects
of artistic value which have fallen into disuse and are becoming rare.
-To stimulate and
enhance the quality of artistic work among our Native artisans.
-To encourage the
development of new forms of art of purely Southeast Alaska Native form
and design.
To ensure an objective judging process, the names
of the artists were not included with the photos of objects viewed
during selection.
Sealaska Heritage Institute is a Native nonprofit
founded by Sealaska Corp. in 1981 to administer the corporation’s
cultural programs. The mission of the Institute is to perpetuate and
enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures.
CONTACT: Rosita Worl, SHI president: 463-4844
Radio Actualities
- Clarissa Hudson,
Best of Show, TRT: :08 “Creating copper man helped me, it was a
process of coming back alive. I healed myself. And I’m still
processing that.” (Audio)
- David Boxley, 1st
Place Traditional, TRT: :21 “Northwest Coast art, especially the
art from our area, from the Tsimshian, Tlingit and Haida art, it’s the
best in the world. It ranks right up there and surpasses so many of
the so-called ancient cultures -- with this understanding that this
type of art is still at a high level and increasing all the time is a
good thing for all artists.” (Audio)
- Lani Hotch, 2nd
Place Contemporary, TRT: :12 “I was pretty pleased to place. It
was my first juried art show that I entered and to get second place I
think is pretty good placing for my first try.” (Audio)
- Corey Stein, 3rd
Place Contemporary, TRT: :22 “The beaded story I did on these
was about a grasshopper that started a forest fire down in Washington
State when he got electrocuted on a fence and I thought that was
really funny so I did a series of them. And they’re fire starters, and
if you open up -- there’s a little lock on the bottom and if you open
the lock, inside is wooden matches that if you strike them on a rock,
you’ll start a fire.” (Audio)
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