Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    Indigenous art. Indigenous perspectives.
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Pinterest
    First American Art Magazine
    • Home
    • About Us
      • Press
      • Distribution
      • Sponsors
      • Contact Us
      • Refund and Returns Policy
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
      • Archives
      • FAAM Index
    • Content
      • Articles
      • Blog
      • Reference
        • Acronyms
        • Art Terms
        • Artist and Scholar List: A–F
        • Museums, Galleries, and Other Art Venues
        • Timeline of Indigenous Art History of the Americas
    • Calendar
      • Submit an Event
    • Submissions
      • FAAM Style Guide
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
      • Magazine
      • Monthly Newsletter
    0 Shopping Cart
    First American Art Magazine
    Home»Web Content»Blog»Catch 22 Reception, Ralph T. Coe

    Catch 22 Reception, Ralph T. Coe

    0
    By FAAM Staff on August 16, 2017 Blog, Web Content
    Eliza Naranjo Morse
    Eliza Naranjo Morse (Santa Clara), “A La Machina,” 2010, etching with phosphorus

    Catch 22: Paradox on Paper reception at the Ralph T. Coe Foundation for the Arts was a wonderful way to launch Indian Market week! The Ralph T. Coe Foundation is a nonprofit organization that manages the art collection of the Ralph T. Coe, which includes exceptional examples of historic Oceanic, African, and Native American art.

    Led by President/CEO Rachel Wixom, the unique organization—a collection sans museum—is in the business of making connections. They have invited guest curators—as young as high school students—to work with their collection—and also partnering with museums to showcase the collection, as they did with Connoisseurship and Good Pie: Ted Coe and Collecting Native Art at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian.

    Catch 22: Paradox on Paper exemplified these partnerships. Guest curator Nina Sanders (Apsáalooke) selected works on papers from the collection of Edward J. “Edd” Guarino to showcase late modern, post-modern, and contemporary Native American art. Guarino writes, “One of the most exciting aspects of collecting the work of contemporary artists is that I am able to ask them questions about their work.” Curator Sanders’ research focus is Plains beadwork; however, she focused on works on paper to pursue the show’s theme, Catch 22, coined by novelist Joseph Heller, to describe a double-bind paradox, but in this case described the contradiction of maintaining or fighting to regain one’s tribal heritage while negotiating global mainstream culture that is poised at every turn to destroy tribal identity in favor of the lone individual.

    Edd Guarino
    Collect Edward J. Guarino

    Another paradox emerges in the works: correcting a sense of density and depth on the two-dimensional picture plane. Sonya Kelliher-Combs (Iñupiaq-Athabascan) and Anita Fields (Osage-Muscogee), both known primarily for their sculptures, achieve incredible textures and sense of mass in their works on paper. Christine Nofchissey McHorse (Navajo) is known for her ceramic and metal sculptures, but the public has fallen in love with her flat sketches revealing developing thoughts in the process. Meanwhile, earlier artists T. C. Cannon (Kiowa-Caddo, 1946–1978) and Charles Loloma (Hopi, 1921–1991) celebrate the flatness and sparseness of flat art, with stripped-down abstractions in drawing and etching, respectively. Sarah Sense (Chitimacha-Choctaw) and Shan Goshorn (Eastern Band Cherokee) both independently began weaving their photographs; Sense’s into flat mats and Goshorn’s into three-dimensional basketry forms, subverting the flatness of paper.

    T. C. Cannon
    T. C. Cannon (Kiowa-Caddo), “Pink Circles,” 1974, pencil and marker on paper

    The works are densely hung in a compact space for the maximum potential dialogue. The show continues through March 31, 2018, and the gallery is open by appointment, so you have many opportunities to quietly absorb the works at your own pace.

    The opening reception included Axle Contemporary, a mobile gallery in a van, and music by DJ Celeste Worl (Tlingit), an artist in her own right. Rosita Worl (Tlingit) was visiting from Juneau and won an original Jason Garcia (Santa Clara) print. First American Art Magazine co-hosted the reception and donated items for the silent auction, including a complete set of issues—for those of you that have complete sets, they are now valued more than $140!

    The reception was a wonderful way to launch Indian Market week. Artists, curators, and collections from all over the country (and Canada) mingled freely in a relaxed atmosphere, soaking up, not only the works of Catch 22, but also the extraordinarily eclectic collection of the Coe Foundation. A catalogue accompanies the show and is available from the Coe Foundation.

    The Coe will host an open house with the Growing Thunder family, Thursday, August 17. More info: ralphtcoefoundation.org

     

    Kevin and Valerie Pourier
    Kevin and Valerie Pourier, Oglala Lakota jewelers and sculptors from South Dakota
    Rosita and Celeste Worl
    Activist mother and daughter: Rosita Worl and Celeste Worl, both Tlingit
    Babe and Carla Hemlock
    Babe and Carla Hemlock, Mohawk woodcarver and textile artist from Quebec and New York
    Elias Not Afraid
    Crow beadwork artist Elias Not Afraid with works in progress
    Sanders, Gross, and Melero-Mosoe
    Curator Nina Sanders visiting with art dealer Heather Gross and artist Melissa Melero-Moose
    Keli Mashburn
    Osage photographer and video artist, Keli Mashburn of Fairfax, Oklahoma, and recently returned from the Venice Biennial

    Related Posts

    Launch Party 49 | First American Art Magazine Celebrates Issue No. 49

    January 26, 2026

    Edmonia Lewis: Said in Stone at the Peabody Essex Museum

    January 8, 2026

    Meet FAAM’s New Operations Manager, Jessica Ma’ilo

    December 22, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Woven in Wool, Burke Museum
    Water's Edge: The Art of Truman Lowe. Now Open. NMAI, Washington, DC
    Ancestral Edge at the Ringling Museum
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Cherokee Language Publishing
    Indigenous Editors Association
    Indigenous Editors Association
    FAAM Art Beat We Have Words for Art symposium

    Noksi Press

    Indigenous Editors Association

    Mission Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC (FAAM), broadens understanding of art by Indigenous peoples of the Americas from tribal communities to the global art world.

    Subscribe to FAAM Art Beat, our free monthly newsletter

    Vision Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC, strives to foster historical resilience, cross-cultural understanding, and reintegration of humans into the natural world.

    turtleshell rattle by Tommy Wildcat

    First American Art Magazine's offices are located within the ancestral homelands of the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes and the historic territories of the Muscogee Nation and the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.

    Contact Us

    First American Art Magazine
    3334 W. Main St. #442
    Norman, OK 73072
    (405) 561-7655

    info@firstamerican.art
    ads@firstamerican.art
    circulation@firstamerican.art

    Site Admin

     

    © 2013–2025 First American Art Magazine, LLC. All rights reserved. Site Design: Asphalt Apache Design.

    © 2026 First American Art Magazine, LLC. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.