Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
James Auchiah was born on 17 November 1906 in Oklahoma Territory, near present-day Meers and Medicine Park, Oklahoma. [1] His Kiowa name was Tsekoyate, meaning "Big Bow". [2] His father was Mark Auchiah, and his grandfathers were Chief Satanta and Red Tipi, a medicine man, bundle keeper and ledger artist, [3] respectively.
James Auchiah (1906–1974) was born near present-day Medicine Park, Oklahoma. [6] His grandfather was Red Tipi, a ledger artist, medicine man, and bundle keeper. [7] Spencer Asah (ca. 1905/1910-1954) was born in Carnegie, Oklahoma. His father, a buffalo medicine man, provided Asah with the traditional cultural background to inspire his art. [8]
James Auchiah (1906–1975), painter (one of the Kiowa Six) Jean Bales (1946–2003), Iowa painter Louis W. Ballard (1931–2007) Honga-no-zhe, Quapaw / Cherokee , painter and composer
James Auchiah, Kiowa, one of the Kiowa Six (1906–1974) Frank Austin, Navajo (1938–2017) Amos Bad Heart Bull (Tatanka Cante Sica), Oglala Lakota Sioux; Margarete Bagshaw, Santa Clara Pueblo-descent (1964–2015) Rick Bartow, Wiyot (1946–2016) Stanley Battese, Navajo (born 1936) Fred Beaver , Muscogee Creek/Seminole (1911–1980)
The Kiowa Six included six artists: Spencer Asah, James Auchiah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Lois Smoky Kaulaity, and Monroe Tsatoke. James Auchiah was the last to join the group at OU in 1926. James Auchiah was the last to join the group at OU in 1926.
James Auchiah, Kiowa, one of the Kiowa Six (1906–1974) Alexandra Backford, Aleut (1942–2010) Amos Bad Heart Bull, Oglala Lakota (1869–1913) Louis Ballard (Honga-no-zhe), Quapaw/Cherokee; Rick Bartow, Mad River Wiyot (born 1946) Fred Beaver , Muscogee Creek/Seminole (1911–1980) Harrison Begay (Haskay Yahne Yah), Navajo (1914–2012)
They are Spencer Asah, James Auchiah, Jack Hokeah, Stephen Mopope, Lois Smoky Kaulaity, and Monroe Tsatoke. [62] Coming from the area around Anadarko, Oklahoma, these artists studied at the University of Oklahoma. Lois Smoky left the group in 1927, but James Auchiah took her place in the group.
Detail of mural, a ceremonial shield with a bull's head, by Stephen Mopope, at the Department of Interior, Washington, D.C. Mopope was commissionined to paint murals in the US Department of the Interior building in Washington, DC, along with five other Native aristists, including James Auchiah.