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Continue ShoppingEighth Generation is seeking nominations for three Inspired Natives Awards! The deadline to nominate yourself or your favorite Indigenous artist is November 10. In the meantime, we are using our online platforms to highlight nominees. Today for the second round of our featured nominations, check out these individuals who use paint as their art form.
Each Inspired Natives Award is $2,500 in unrestricted funds and provided by 5% of all our blanket sale profits. This award represents one piece of our broad-based effort to be stewards of our Native artist community. The award is distributed in support with our friends at The Evergreen State College Longhouse and The Evergreen State College Foundation.
Click on the names of the artists to visit their pages!
Emily is an Anishinaabe artist. Using acrylic, oil and watercolor paints, she illustrates the interconnection of life forms and other culturally significant materials gathered from the land.
Bobby is a Fresno, California artist and an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Using painting, he inspires Native communities with his cultural influences and historical subject matter.
Danielle is a Hunkpapa Lakota artist from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Though her primary art form is painting, she also experiments with beadwork, leatherwork, archival images and utilizes Indigenous art styles like ledger art.
Denae is Diné and Korean artist. She is an organizer, speaker and sign painter who spreads powerful messages about Indigenous rights and uplifts the voices and artwork of marginalized people.
Daniel is Lokaa Diné (Reed People) and Born for Toahani (Near The Water). His maternal grandfather is Naasht’eshi Tobaahi (Zuni Edge Water) and paternal grandfather is Ta'chiin'nii (Red Running into Water). Whether he uses a proper canvas or creates his own, Daniel calls his painting style Mosaic.
MaryBeth is a Cherokee artist. With a love for painting wildlife, she incorporates parts of her culture in her paintings. Most of MaryBeth's work shares her affinity for Oklahoma wild birds, animals and wildflowers.
Aly is a Shoshone-Bannock artist dedicated to Indigenous representation and youth and womxn empowerment. Her watercolor techniques portray women living their modern lives in harmony with their ancestors, combating the notion that Indigenous art and people are only a part of the past.
Louis is a Blackfeet artist whose work is specific to his culture and his personal world views. Louis says the use of color and his Tribe's cultural imagery are critical in building a good painting.
Monica or "Moe" is an Indigenous artist based out of Missoula, Montana and the Flathead Indian Reservation. Her work mainly uses acrylic paints but she also dabbles in alcohol inks. This piece below has actual constellations.
Melissa is Northern Paiute enrolled with the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribe. She layers organic objects, sand and acrylic washes and mediums to create artwork inspired by the landscape and culture of the Numu (Northern Paiute) in Nevada, California and Oregon.
Carmen is a Yakama-Comanche artist. In addition to painting, she works in printmaking, clay and is a traditional tribal artist in the fields of weaving and beadwork. Carmen's work explores the relationships between living on and off of the reservation and how these relations influence her way of life.
Micah is a Creek/Kiowa artist from Oklahoma. As a Native American modern painter, his art has roots in tradition while embodying the bravery and self-awareness of the modern Native.
Lee is a multi-Tribal artist of Yakama, Navajo and Hopi descent. He illustrates his ideas, opinions, feelings and emotions with digital paintings, sketches and doodles. For painting, he works with acrylics and watercolors.
Ulla Räsänen
Nov 12, 2020
I would like to nominate Julie A. Miller (FeatherStoneArtWorks) who is an amazing native artist and a beautiful person inside out. She has painted her heart and soul for unity and peace into her soft and touching watercolors like no one before.
You can find her art at Julie-miller.artistwebsites.com and Julie-miller.pixels.com represented her
Native Paintings, Native American Dancers, Animal Spirits, May You Walk in Beauty, Ghost Horse and many others..
Julie A. Miller art is powerful and compassionnate. More than ever we need art that brings us together, touches not only our minds and appeals with the visual way but deeply our hearts and souls delivering the message of peace and unity as the way artist has put it to her art.
Mitakuye Oyasin is widely known and repeated sentence as we are all connected but Julie A. Miller makes us feel the connection with her art.
Caleb Grimmett
Nov 10, 2020
Siyo! I would like to nominate Ms. Traci Rabbit from Pryor, OK! She has carried on the talents and awe-inspiring work from her late father, the great, Mr. Bill Rabbit. A Cherokee treasure, most definitely!
Tekenya “tlalli”
Nov 08, 2020
I’d like to nominate myself tlalli toltecayotl. Iam navajo and mexika and my family has made ceremony apart of my life since I was in the womb. I want this award because with my success I will help uplift my community through my ceramic art, family ceramic work shops whilst accumulating generational wealth to free my native family from this rat race , and we can focus more on listening to our hearts and giving back to our land as first generation people. My art work is inspired by my cultures I create my own designs but have always felt my style comes from my roots so naturally, like 8th generation. My plans are to have a store front/ studio work space and go back to my reservation to take my wealth there. My umbilical cord is buried infront of my Hogan so naturally I will return there. Being a city native I have always felt the double road I walk, but in my heart I know creation gave me this vessel to use the tools around me, it’s a sacrifice that I am willing to take for my ancestors and future generations.
Todd Hawkins
Nov 08, 2020
Voting for Bobby Martin, remarkable artist who uses his talent to shine a light on crucial Native issues.