Artist, Russell Sanchez (San Ildefonso Pueblo) is awarded Best of Show at Santa Fe Indian Market’s 2022 Awards Ceremony in the Pottery Classification
SANTA FE, N.M., Aug. 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Santa Fe Indian Market is pleased to announce this year’s Best of Show, Best of Class and Special Award winners in a variety of classifications. Since 1922, Santa Fe Indian Market, the world’s largest and most prestigious Native North American art market, has awarded Best of Show winners to the nation’s exceptional Indigenous artists in a variety of juried categories.
Santa Fe Indian Market Announces Centennial Best of Show Winners
Over 40 judges, experts in various mediums, spent all day Thursday, August 18, reviewing and critiquing this year’s entries and determining the winners. The announcement of the Best of Show, Best of Class, and Special Award winners was made publicly at the Best of Show Ceremony on Friday afternoon.
All the Best of Show winners’ phenomenal artwork was available this past weekend during Santa Fe Indian Market on the Plaza in downtown Santa Fe.
The 2022 Centennial Best of Class winners are:
Class I: Jewelry
Ernest Benally (Navajo)
Jeweled belt entitled, “Turtle Family”
Handmade and stamped tooled bezel
2″x3″
12 turtle pieces
Made with natural stones and shells
Class II: Pottery (Best of Show)
Russell Sanchez (San Ildefonso Pueblo)
Polychrome jar- incised, then painted. “100 years in the making!”
8″ w x 7″ d x 10 ½ h
Inlaid with sleeping beauty hematite and lone mountain turquoise.
All traditional materials and firing.
Class III: Painting, Drawing, Graphics & Photography
Cara Romero (Chemehuevi)
Archival pigment print. “The Zenith”
43″ x 48″ x 3″
Digital capture of model with corn on fishing line.
Class IV: Wooden Pueblo Figurative Carving & Sculpture
Manuel Chavarria (Hopi)
Hopi old- style katsina dolls “Qooglee Storyteller Hunters”— set of 2
15″ t x 4.5″ w and 15.5 t x 8.5″ w
Leather cottonwood root, pigment paint, parrot feathers, leather attire, sinew, copper on knives and arrow tips, cotton string, turquoise necklace, and sterling silver pendants.
Class V: Sculpture
Ryan Benally (Diné)
Hand carved Italian marble and granite sculpture, “Bold as Love”
34″ w x 24″h x 10″ d
Love comes and goes but love is infinite. Love is in our hands.
Class VI: Textiles
Ahkima Honyumptewa (Hopi)
Weaving, “Oryavi Kenel Kwasa”
43″ x 46.5″
Woven wool in diamond and diagonal twills with hills and valleys.
Class VII: Diverse Arts
Glenda McKay (Ingalik Athabascan)
Traditional walrus harpoon with float
Harpoon: 6′ x 2.5″
Float: 48″ x 12″
Handmade 4 strand rope: 30 +”
Hand carved walrus ivory.
Class VIII: Beadwork & Quillwork
Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty (Assiniboine Sioux)
Beaded and quilled horse collar “Walking this Good Way of Life Together”
60″
Original design created by the artist with hopes and dreams for this generation to find healthy partnerships. Designs are centered around Wahpe Wastemna (sweet leaf) as used as good medicine. Used to help partners walk this good way of life. Porcupine Quills, smoked moose hide, antique size 15 beads, brass beads, bells, thimbles, French cut beads, silk ribbon, Ermine, horsehair.
Class IX: Youth (Artists aged 17 and under)
TobieMae Patricio (Acoma Pueblo)
Basket Weave Polychrome Pot
4″ x 5″
Traditional clay, traditional paints, sandstone paints, wild spinach, hand coiled and traditionally fired.
Class XI: Basketry
Jeremy Frey (Passamaquoddy)
“Dawnland”
21.5″h x 11.5″ w
Black ash, sweet grass, dye. Plate weave.
All materials harvested and processed by artist from Maine.
Santa Fe Indian Market’s Centennial Best of Show Ceremony and Luncheon was sponsored by a generous anonymous donation and co-sponsored by Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) and JoAnn and Bob Balzer. SWAIA is grateful for these generous contributions. A complete list of winners in all categories and special awards will be posted on the SWAIA website this week. Congratulations to all the winners!
About SWAIA:
The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) is a non-profit organization supporting Native American arts and culture. It creates economic and cultural opportunities for Native American artists by producing and promoting the Santa Fe Indian Market, the biggest and most prestigious Indian art event in the world since 1922; cultivating excellence and innovation across traditional and non-traditional art forms; and developing programs and events that support, promote, and honor Native artists year-round. swaia.org
IG: santafeindianmarket
SOURCE Southwestern Association for Indian Arts
Rod Washington: Rod is a blogger, writer, filmmaker, photographer, daydreamer who likes to cook. Rod produces and directs the web series, CUPIC: Diary of an Investigator. He also produces news and documentary video projects. Check out his podcast StoriesThisMoment at https://m3e.d71.myftpupload.com/stm-tncn-podcasts/