Buyers are required to provide written authorization by submitting a signed shipping release and waiver of liability form, included with our invoice, in order to release property to the third party shipper of Buyer's choice. The Santa Fe Art Auction does not provide in-house shipping services for online-only auctions but we are happy to provide a selection of local third-party shippers. Each lot is sold as-is.Īmerican Express, MasterCard, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer Shipping Buyers are reminded that the limited warranties are set forth in the Terms and Conditions of Sale and do not extend to condition. The absence of a condition report does not imply anything as to the condition of a particular lot. Each condition report is an opinion of the staff member and should not be treated as a statement of fact. The condition reports are prepared by SFAA staff members who are not art conservators or restorers, nor do they possess the qualifications needed for comprehensive evaluation. The reports are not intended to nor do they substitute for physical examination by a buyer or the buyer's advisors. The condition reports for the lots offered by Santa Fe Art Auction (SFAA) are provided as a courtesy and convenience for potential buyers. Frame is a light colored wood, in good condition with normal wear. Please note that this work has not been examined out of frame. The lithograph is in overall very good condition. His maternal grandfather, was a full-blooded Diné of the Navajo Nation, who had been adobpted as an infant into the pueblo.9 x 11 3/4 in. His works are part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's permanent collection.Īlfonso Roybal (1898-1955) Awa Tsireh (Cat-tail Bird) was the son of Alfoncita Martinez and Juan Estevan Roybal. He had many trades and skills but is remembered today as an easel art painter. The Exposition of Indian Tribal Arts in New York in 1931 included Awa Tsireh paintings.Īwa Tsireh was many things to his pueblo of San Ildefonso: he was a farmer, pottery painter, museum employee, painter, weaver, and silversmith. In 1925, the Chicago papers were generous in their acclaim for his exhibit in the Newberry Library. His paintings appeared in early exhibits in Santa Fe, and he was among the several artists to receive prizes at the first Santa Fe Indian Market. His watercolors where sent by Alice Corbin Henderson to the Arts Club of Chicago for a special exhibit in 1920. He was equally comfortable with representational or semi-realistic, representational plus conventional, and abstract. He was versatile in his styles of painting. His formal education had not extended beyond primary grades. He was the oldest of the early group of pueblo painters. 18-19.Īwa Tsireh was painting before 1917. "What Awa Tsireh did, by his example, among the Pueblos was simply to release a whole store of latent visual impressions not previously recorded in any purely visual way.first projected the image of this new form of art among the Pueblos." - Henderson Alice Corbin, "A Boy Painter among the Pueblo Indians." The New York Times, September 6, 1925, Sec. These are paintings of ceremony, Pueblo genre, animal life, symbolic fantasy, and humorous episodes, or frequently a combination of two of these themes. The artist was prolific in his creation of the watercolors for which he is best known. His native name was Awa Tsireh or Cat-tail Bird. Award winning San Ildefonso Pueblo artist Alfonso Roybal was quickly recognized as an outstanding Native American artist.
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