X

Stay current on auction happenings!

Sign up in one step for a FREE weekly auction newsletter

We value your privacy! Click here to read our policies.

X
Forgot Password

Forgot Password?
(Enter your email below.)


Cancel

Not a member?
Create your account today!

Search from over 100,000 items available at auction now


Advanced
Search

  • Add this artist to my Artfact Advisor™ Alerts

Fred Kabotie (1900-1986)

Aliases: Day After Day; Nakayoma

Professions: Painter; Illustrator

Fred Kabotie Biography

(b Shungopori, AZ, c . 1900; d 28 Feb 1986). Native American Hopi painter. He was born into a farming family and educated in traditional Hopi customs. As a child he scratched images of kachina s (supernatural beings) on rocks in his father’s field. He continued to draw such images when he attended the Santa Fe Indian School (see NATIVE NORTH AMERICAN ART, §IV, 2), later claiming that he did so to relieve his loneliness and to remind him of home. In 1918 he joined the informal painting sessions given at the school by Elizabeth DeHuff (1887–1983). Kabotie became one of the first Hopi artists to gain national recognition when in 1920 his work was shown at the annual exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York City. He was at his most productive in the 1920s and 1930s, executing such works as the Snake Dance (watercolour, c . 1922–30; New York, Mus. Amer. Ind.). His descriptive manner of shading and modelling, close attention to detail, meticulous brushwork and sophisticated use of and emphasis on colour became distinctive features of later Hopi painting. Kabotie also used traditional Native American techniques, such as painting on hides. In 1941 his reconstruction of a prehistoric AWATOVI mural (Cambridge, MA, Harvard U., Peabody Mus.) was shown in the exhibition Indian Art of the United States at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City. In 1945 Kabotie received a Guggenheim fellowship, and in 1954 he was awarded the French government’s Palmes d’Académique for his contribution to Native American art. As a founder-member, in 1941, of the Hopi Silvercraft Cooperative Guild and of the Hopi Cultural Center, both located in Second Mesa, AZ, Kabotie contributed to the preservation of traditional Hopi arts and encouraged younger artists, including his son Michael Kabotie (b 1942). Michael was a founder-member of the Artist Hopid, an organization formed in 1973 to promote Hopi arts and culture.

Grove Art excerpts - Electronic ©2003, Oxford Art Online

Back to the Top

Fred Kabotie Related Content

  • Auction Houses

Back to the Top

Fred Kabotie Sold at AuctionView all Fred Kabotie Sold at Auction

To see auction price results and more examples of work by Fred Kabotie, please click View all Fred Kabotie Sold at Auction.

Need Full Access to Our Artist Database?

Log in or subscribe for access to: artist alerts, price estimate, auction house name, auction title, location & date, and more...

Subscribe Now

Answer your questions about your favorite artist's works and their value or bid online for your chance to own a piece by Fred Kabotie. Artfact's Fred Kabotie artist profile page includes: Fred Kabotie biographical information, work by Fred Kabotie available at auction now, and prices realized for Fred Kabotie recently sold at auction.

  • Sign Up For Free Email Updates

Thank you!
Why not register for a
FREE account today?