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Allan Houser SIlkscreen "Apache Gan Dancer"

Item Details

A silkscreen titled Apache Gan Dancer created in 1952 by Allan Houser. Born on June 30, 1914, Allan C. Haozous was to become known as Allan Houser, one of the 20th century’s most important artists. Allan’s parents, Sam and Blossom Haozous were members of the Chiricahua Apache tribe who were held as prisoners of war for twenty-seven years. In 1934 a notice for an art school in Santa Fe attracted Allan’s attention, and he enrolled in the Painting School at the Santa Fe Indian School. Commonly known as the Dorothy Dunn School after its prominent teacher, Allan became its most famous student and by 1939 his work was exhibited in San Francisco, Washington D.C., and Chicago. In 1951 Allan moved to Brigham City, Utah, where he taught art at the Inter-Mountain Indian School for the next eleven years. In 1962 Allan was asked to join the faculty of the newly created Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe. In 1975 Allan retired from teaching to devote himself full-time to his own work. In the two following decades he would produce close to 1,000 sculptures in stone, wood, and bronze, and emerged as a major figure on an international scale. He had nearly fifty solo exhibitions in museums and galleries in the United States, Europe, and Asia, and he continued working tirelessly until his death on August 22, 1994. The print is signed and dated to the lower right. It is presented behind glass in a rustic frame with white matting; ready to hang.

Dimensions

18.0" W x 22.0" H x 1.5" D

Framed. Visible image size: 9.75″ × 13″

Item #

15CIN103-103

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