Fritz Scholder
(1937 - 2005)
Fritz Scholder, Luiseño, was born in Breckenridge, Minnesota
on October 6, 1937. His long and prolific career includes that of
painter, sculptor, lithographer, teacher, mentor, and bookmaker. The
style of Abstract Expressionism inspired his use of strong images
and color. The style of Pop Art inspired his ideas of clichés
and interest in popular culture.
Scholder's early awareness of art included his
high school association with Indian artist Oscar Howe in Pierre, South
Dakota, who had been exposed to contemporary art in Paris during World
War II. Fate, as well, brought him to study at Sacramento City College
in 1957 where Abstract Expressionism ran rampant in California and
was a natural visual style for Scholder. He was granted a full scholarship
to the Southwestern Indian Art Project at the University of Arizona
in 1960, supported by the Rockefeller Foundation.
In 1965, Scholder found his own students at the Institute of American
Indian Arts in Santa Fe to be angry and alienated, as disenfranchised
members of American society. Using Pop Art ideas, he attempted to
break the long-held Indian clichés. Fritz Scholder can be discussed
as a Postmodernist for his use of "mass-culture social commentary."
He sought to "deconstruct" more than a century of romantic
images of Native Americans and approach the American Indian in real
terms. In 1970, Scholder began a collaboration with Tamarind Institute
to produce lithographs of his Indians.
Scholder's work can be appreciated as being simultaneously
Indian, American, and twentieth-century art. He has acknowledged his
consciousness of Goya, Matisse, Picasso and Munch. His work is also
a complicated blend influenced by modern styles such as those of Jackson
Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon and Wayne Thiebaud. The
human figure has been a central and continuing image for Scholder,
mostly in the form of the female model in a range of poses and degrees
of realism. His recent work contains mysterious forms of shaman figures
and allegorical emblems. As well as extending his subject matter,
he has continued to expand his technical capacities, most notably
into the field of monotypes.
Mr. Scholder died on February 10, 2005 at his home in Scottsdale, Arizona.
IMAGES
Fritz Scholder (1937 - 2005). Indian With Tomahawk, 1970.
Oil on canvas, 58 ¼ x 58 ¼ in.
William E. Weiss Contemporary Art Fund. 19.77
Fritz Scholder (1937-2005). Aspen Summer, 1977.
Oil on canvas; 40 ¼ x 30 in.
Gift of Jack and Carol O'Grady. 21.91.2
Fritz Scholder (1937 - 2005). Half Breed, 1974. Oil on canvas; 40 x 30 in.
Gift of Jack and Carol O'Grady. 21.91.1
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adams, Clinton. Fritz Scholder Lithographs. Boston: New York
Graphic Society, 1975.
Archuleta, Margaret and Dr. Rennard Strickland. Shared Visions: Native American
Painters and Sculptors in the Twentieth Century. Phoenix: The
Heard Museum, 1991.
Broder, Patricia Janis. Leading The West, The
Modern Vision. Boston: New York Graphic Society, 1984.
Wilmerding, John, Jeremy Strick, and Richard Newlin. Fritz Scholder,
Paintings and
Monotypes. Twin Palms Publishers, 1988.
Prepared by Whitney Gallery of Western Art, Buffalo
Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming, 20 April 2001 |



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