Jim Abeita

Jim Abeita (also known as James Abeita, Jimmy Abeita and James Abeyta; born 1947) is a Navajo oil painter from Crownpoint, New Mexico. He is best known for his realistic landscapes and portraits depicting his native people and their records and traditions. He was one of the first Native American artists to deed in contemporary realism, painting with sharpness and shadow then again of in the flat-style time-honored Native American art. Abeita is praised as a pioneering performer who modernized the Native American art scene, made it well-known in the art publicize and paved the showing off for a extra generation of artists.

In the late 1960s, Abeita started entering art competitions. In the prematurely 1970s, Abeita continued entering art competitions, but also allied artistic circles and partnered with galleries. He started showing and selling his undertaking through the Mullarky Studio and Camera Shop and the Kiva Gallery in Gallup, New Mexico. His first commercial skill came bearing in mind he was official in 1971 by country musician Johnny Cash, who commissioned several album covers, family portraits, and eventually some 30 paintings. Abeita painted Cash's portrait for the cover of Johnny Cash Collection: His Greatest Hits, Volume II album, a cover for Cash's religious album Johnny Cash Sings Precious Memories, and a painting of Jesus for The Johnny Cash Show. Commissions from other celebrities followed.

Through the 1970s and 1980s, Abeita regularly showed, sold, and competed at Southwest fairs, festivals, and tribal events. Among the deeds were the New Mexico State Fair, the Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial, the Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair and Market, the Totah Festival, and other. His operate has been exhibited at the Museum of Northern Arizona and the Navajo Nation Museum, and numerous galleries. His paintings have been used as covers or illustrations for Southwest Art, Arizona Highways, Artists Of The Rockies, New Mexico Magazine, and other magazines. In 1976, he published The American Indians of Abeita: His People, a book in imitation of 108 reproductions of his oil paintings of the Navajo people, their homeland and traditions.

Since 2011, Abeita has lived in semi-retirement. He nevertheless paints for his own pleasure, exhibits occasionally, and takes share in artistic actions and enthusiast meetings. A pivotal figure in contemporary Navajo art, Abeita is considered accompanied by the most prominent Native American artists next to Julian Martinez, Pablita Velarde, Helen Hardin, Harrison Begay, R. C. Gorman, and Fritz Scholder.

Go up

We use cookies More info