american - Denise Wallace Jewelry
Transcription
american - Denise Wallace Jewelry
AMERICAN t \ Denise and Samuel Wallace ALASKAN SPIRIT Woman in the Moon Pin/Pendant, 1987, sterling silver, fossil ivory, 2 inches high. BELOW: Yu'pik Dancer Belt. 1997. Uk gold, sterling silver, including fossil ivory, chrysoprase, fire agate, Chinese turquoise, lapis lazuli and petrified whale bone, tallest figure 4 inches high, collection of Judy and Ron Yordi. AMERICAN CRAFT %2 D E C E M B E R 2 0 0 5 / J A N U A RY 2 0 0 6 BY NEAL MATTHEWS • PHOTOGRAPHS BY KIYOSHI T06ASHI The transformative power contained in the ancient stories of Arctic native peoples seems to have reached across the centuries to find expression in the lives and work of Denise and Samuel Wallace. Master jewelers whose pieces depict icons and legends inspired by Old Bering Sea culture, the Wallaces possess an almost mystical ability to wrest continuity from disparate elements—gold and silver, culture and design, desert silver inlaid with fossil ivory, the deep blue of lapis lazuli beside the swirling green of malachite. Even their personal backgrounds and ages make for an unlikely match. Denise, born in 1957, traces her heritage to the Chugach Aleuts of Southeast Alaska; Sam—she calls him Wally— was born in 1936 in Virginia, and had hillbilly kin living in Hoot Owl Holler. How the two of them created a family of jewelers (with their children Dawn and David] whose work has won most Indian jewelry awards and is collected and exhibited in major museums is presented in surprising detail in Arctic Transformations: The Jewelry of Denise & Samuel Wallace by Lois Sherr Dubin.' The book, the second in a series by Dubin on contemporary Indian jewelers, is the catalog for an eponymous exhibition organized by the independent curator Roslyn Tunis for the Anchorage Museum of History and Art in Alaska, where it opened last March.2 But in reading the book and viewing the exhibition, it becomes clear that this is no ordinary art catalog. Its basic structure hews closely to the layout of the exhibition, which is anchored bythe 16 storytelling belts the Wallaces made between 1984 and 1997. Eight of the belts, depicting everything from killer whales to Eskimo dancers, are uniquely laid out on gatefolds and jump out at the reader almost life-size. Like the belts themselves, with their detachable pendants containing tiny hinges and hidden compartments that reveal scrimshawed faces, the book is an amalgam of biography, well-told legends, technical information on jewelry making and exquisite photography. With something to look at orthink about on every page, it invites both quick flip-throughs and long sessions beneath the reading lamp—a rare combination for a so-called coffee-table book. The genesis of the book is also unorthodox. Unlike most exhibition catalogs, Arctic Transformations wasn't produced by the originating museum and written bythe curator. Denise Wallace and the sure-handed writer, Lois Sherr Dubin, a board member of the National Museum of the American Indian who authored the best-selling The History of Beads: From 30,000 B.C. to the Present, came to the Anchorage Museum of History and Art with the book idea already complete, according to the museum's director, Pat Wolf. "A conventional catalog and LEFT AND RIGHT: Mask Maker Pin/Pendant, 1993, 14k gold, sterling silver, lapis lazuli, fossil ivory, chrysoprase, 3Vz inches high, limited edition 1/5, collection of Brendelle Walden; Inuit Woman Pin/Pendant, 1996, sterling silver, 14k gold, fossil ivory, chrysoprase, coral, gem silica, sugilite, 33A inches high, limited edition 3/5, collection of Judith Powell and Melissa Prew. OPPOSITE PAGE: Sea Otter Transformation Necklace, 2002, sterling silver, 14k gold, fossil ivory, pendant 23/« inches high, collection of Anne-Lise and Sherman Morss. exhibition would mean we originated the book, which we didn't," Wolf explained. Tunis, an educator who specializes in fine craft and the art of North American indigenous peoples, organized the exhibition to echo the book's structure and layout. "It was Lois's idea to organize the book thematically, and I drew from that," she said. The volume also includes photographs of authentic native objects, like ceremonial masks, that inspired their interpretation by the Wallaces. Sam, a devoted rock hound who does the lapidary (there are 176 pieces of ivory and stone in the flagship Crossroads of Continents Beit], and Denise, a graduate of the Institute of the American Indian Arts in Santa Fe who designs the pieces and does the silver inlay, are at the forefront of a global renaissance in indigenous art that began in the 1960s. Textile creations of native people in Southeast Asia and the Americas, jade and wood sculpture of New Zealand's Maoris, the Dreamtime paintings of Australian aborigines—all have found eager collectors, knowledgeable curators and growing audiences. Some of these works are more ethnographic, relying on traditional forms and materials such as pottery and blankets, while another trope within the movement leans toward contemporary interpretation, even transformation, of tribal traditions. "Before, indigenous artists learned in a traditional master/mentor system," explained Tunis. "Today, many native/urban artists have been trained academically. They're going back to their native communities and finding that they haven't lost their culture. Their fresh AMERICAN CRAFT approach is making native traditions more accessible to people like us." The way the Wallaces riff on northern native traditions has a deep impact on nonnatives. Apart from her introduction, Dubin wisely keeps most of her interpretations of the Wallaces' creations out of the text, leaving it to the collectors to explain what draws them to the unique designs depicting creatures and stories that might seem utterly foreign to them (the belts sold for between $30,000 and $65,000 in the 1990s). Wearing the pieces, says one collector, means "you are sort of inviting magic to happen." Another observes, "It is as if the jewelry created itself," evoking the power of legend to take new form through the hands of those working to keep the old stories alive. • 1. Arctic Transformations: The Jewelry of Denise & Samuel Wallace, a 240-page, illustrated catalog by Lois Sherr Dubin, photographs by Kiyoshi Togashi, published 2005 by Easton Studio Press/Theodore Dubin Foundation, is $60 from CDS Books, 800-343-4499. 2. The exhibition went to the Mingei International Museum. San Diego (July 11 -October 16), is at the Heard Museum, Phoenix (October 29- February 5,2006). and travels to the National Museum of the American Indian, New York, and the Institute of American Indian Art, Santa Fe, in 2006. Neal Matthews, a freelance writer, lives in San Diego. He has written on native art in North America, Panama, New Zealand and Australia. 34 D E C E M B E R ZOOS/JANUARY 2006