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- Juanita Lucero (1895-1967)
Juanita Lucero (1895-1967)
SKU:
$900.00
$900.00
Unavailable
per item
Taos Pueblo
circa 1920 to 1940, Oil on board.
Edition: Unique. Signed, Juanita L. Lucero, lower right.
Dimensions of board: 4 x 6 inches (102 x 152 mm). Original frame: 5 5/8 x 7 3/4 inches (143 x 152 mm).
Inventory ID: 1019
Dimensions of board: 4 x 6 inches (102 x 152 mm). Original frame: 5 5/8 x 7 3/4 inches (143 x 152 mm).
Inventory ID: 1019
1 available
Comments:
Taos Pueblo resident, Juanita Lucero is probably best known for her modeling work with the early Taos artists. She is particularly well-known as the model for Catharine Critcher's 1924 portrait titled, Juanita Lucero and Her Children (currently in the collection of the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art in Indianapolis, Indiana). Probably due to their close association with the early Taos Society of Artists (and others), several male artists from Taos Pueblo began working in oils, employing both perspective and shadowing (mostly missing from the so-called "Santa Fe School"). Of these Taos Pueblo artists, Albert Looking Elk, Albert Lujan, Juan Mirabal, and Sam Martinez, are most commonly referenced. Juanita Lucero is one of the few Taos Pueblo women artists known of and is almost certainly one of the first women. Very good condition. Original old framing sticker glued to back of board, Country Club Art Shop, Pictures and Frames, 3953 Main Street, Kansas City, MO, WE 3942. Her work is exceedingly rare.
Taos Pueblo resident, Juanita Lucero is probably best known for her modeling work with the early Taos artists. She is particularly well-known as the model for Catharine Critcher's 1924 portrait titled, Juanita Lucero and Her Children (currently in the collection of the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art in Indianapolis, Indiana). Probably due to their close association with the early Taos Society of Artists (and others), several male artists from Taos Pueblo began working in oils, employing both perspective and shadowing (mostly missing from the so-called "Santa Fe School"). Of these Taos Pueblo artists, Albert Looking Elk, Albert Lujan, Juan Mirabal, and Sam Martinez, are most commonly referenced. Juanita Lucero is one of the few Taos Pueblo women artists known of and is almost certainly one of the first women. Very good condition. Original old framing sticker glued to back of board, Country Club Art Shop, Pictures and Frames, 3953 Main Street, Kansas City, MO, WE 3942. Her work is exceedingly rare.