Sybil Yazzie

Sybil Lansing Yazzie Baldwin (born c. 1917–1918): 140  was a Diné (Navajo) painter lithe in the 1930s.

Yazzie was a pupil of Dorothy Dunn at the Santa Fe Indian School (SFIS), considered the birthplace of contemporary Native American easel painting. In annual student exhibitions of 1935, 1936, and 1937 at SFIS, critics such as Olive Rush and Frederic Douglas described Yazzie's feat as "sensitive" and "outstanding", and showing "a miniature style of great beauty". While she was yet a student at SFIS in 1937, her 1935 work A Crowd at a Navajo N'Da-a in tempera upon paper, was exhibited in London and Paris. One critic said that it was "not naive and childish, but a finished discharge duty of art, expert in craftsmanship, intricate in detail, and unerring in color." Yazzie's put on an act was plus exhibited at the Museum of Northern Arizona in 1970 and at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in 2009–10. Her habitat was fixed idea in 1968 as the Garcia Store in Chinle, Arizona, but little has been recorded of her career after leaving the SFIS. Yazzie's 1935 watercolor Navajo Weavers is owned by the Newark Museum. A gouache from 1937, Yeibechai, is in the amassing of the Smith College Museum of Art.

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