Home
Artists
Sites
Sites-US
Sites-Global
Resources
Galleries
Museums
Organizations
Reference/Web
Save an Environment
Top 10
Calendar
Detour Art
Contact
About Us
References Used
Store

Home | Artists
Updated December 14, 2006
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z



notavailable.jpg
View Images

USA
Southwest

Cochiti Pueblo, NM
Louis Naranjo

1932-1997
Pottery


Information:


Louis Naranjo (August 17, 1932 - March 6, 1997) was born at Cochiti Pueblo. He learned pottery making from his mother Frances Suina and his wife Virginia Naranjo. He "began his career as a potter late in life, after his wife, Virginia, had a stroke. She and his mother taught him how to make pottery. He is famous as the innovator of the Bear Storytellers. He got the idea while deer hunting. He walked around a large rock and froze in his tracks. Before him sat a mother bear playing with her twin cubs. Louis backed out slowly around the rock and took off running. Later he thought about the playful scene of the mother bear with her cubs and decided to make the first Bear Storyteller." (Southern Pueblo Pottery by Greg Schaaf)

Louis and Virginia Naranjo were standard bearers for the proud figurative pottery tradition of Cochiti Pueblo. They crafted their figurines at their kitchen table in their comfortable adobe home at the pueblo. They worked almost every day crafting their art with great care, joking and exchanging the gossip of the day as they went along, accompanied by television, children and grandchildren. Their art provided a good life for them and it provided a legacy that will be with us for another century or more.

Louis and Virginia had a wonderful sense of humor. They fashioned figurines in clay of bikini clad men and women with cameras dangling from their necks, mermaids, men with baseball caps, Santa Claus, and many other characters. Also, they crafted Angels, Storytellers, Padres, and Pueblo Dancers.

Adobe Gallery


Reference / Links:
  Adobe Gallery

  (Detour Art is not responsible for the content of external web sites.)

Bibliography:

"Museum of American Folk Art Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century American Folk Art and Artists" by Chuck and Jan Rosenak, Abbeville Press, New York, 1990.

"American Self-Taught Art: An Illustrated Analysis of 20th Century Artists and Trends with 1,319 Capsule Biographies" by Florence Laffal and Julius Laffal, 2003.




Credit:
**If you discover credit omissions or have additional information to add, please let us know at
(top)

Home | Artists

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z


 



All contents © 2004 - 2007 Detour Art Co.
All images are property of the artists who created them.

No portion of this site may be reproduced, copied or revised without written permission of the authors.