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Clara Archilta, the Glossary

Index Clara Archilta

Clara Williams Archilta (September 26, 1912–30 September 1994), was a Kiowa-Apache-Tonkawa painter and beadworker from the San Ildefonso Pueblo tribe.[1]

Table of Contents

  1. 16 relations: American Indian Exposition, Anadarko Daily News, Anadarko, Oklahoma, Ancestry.com, Apache, Apache, Oklahoma, Beadwork, Chilocco Indian Agricultural School, George Gustav Heye Center, Heard Museum, Kiowa, Painting, San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico, Tonkawa, Tonkawa, Oklahoma, Watercolor painting.

  2. American beadworkers
  3. Apache people
  4. Kiowa painters
  5. Kiowa women artists
  6. Native American beadworkers
  7. Native American people from Oklahoma
  8. Native American women painters
  9. San Ildefonso Pueblo people
  10. Women beadworkers

American Indian Exposition

The American Indian Exposition, held annually during the first full week in August at the Caddo County Fairgrounds in Anadarko, Oklahoma, is one of the oldest and largest intertribal gatherings in the United States.

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Anadarko Daily News

The Anadarko Daily News is the largest daily paper of Caddo County, Oklahoma and traces its heritage back to 1901.

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Anadarko, Oklahoma

Anadarko is a city and county seat of Caddo County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Ancestry.com

Ancestry.com LLC is an American genealogy company based in Lehi, Utah.

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Apache

The Apache are several Southern Athabaskan language–speaking peoples of the Southwest, the Southern Plains and Northern Mexico.

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Apache, Oklahoma

Apache is a town in Caddo County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Beadwork

Beadwork is the art or craft of attaching beads to one another by stringing them onto a thread or thin wire with a sewing or beading needle or sewing them to cloth.

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Chilocco Indian Agricultural School

Chilocco Indian School (/ʃɪˈlɑkoʊ/) was an agricultural school for Native Americans on reserved land in north-central Oklahoma from 1884 to 1980.

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George Gustav Heye Center

The National Museum of the American Indian–New York, the George Gustav Heye Center, is a branch of the National Museum of the American Indian at the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House in Manhattan, New York City.

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Heard Museum

The Heard Museum is a private, not-for-profit museum in Phoenix, Arizona, United States, dedicated to the advancement of American Indian art.

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Kiowa

Kiowa or Cáuigú) people are a Native American tribe and an Indigenous people of the Great Plains of the United States. They migrated southward from western Montana into the Rocky Mountains in Colorado in the 17th and 18th centuries,Pritzker 326 and eventually into the Southern Plains by the early 19th century.

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Painting

Painting is a visual art, which is characterized by the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a solid surface (called the "matrix" or "support").

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San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico

San Ildefonso Pueblo (Tewa: Pʼohwhogeh Ówîngeh "where the water cuts through") is a census-designated place (CDP) in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States, and a federally recognized tribe, established c. 1300 C.E. The Pueblo is self-governing and is part of the Santa Fe, New Mexico Metropolitan Statistical Area.

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Tonkawa

The Tonkawa are a Native American tribe who now live in Oklahoma.

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Tonkawa, Oklahoma

Tonkawa is a city in Kay County, Oklahoma, United States, along the Salt Fork Arkansas River.

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Watercolor painting

Watercolor (American English) or watercolour (British English; see spelling differences), also aquarelle (from Italian diminutive of Latin aqua 'water'), is a painting method"Watercolor may be as old as art itself, going back to the Stone Age when early ancestors combined earth and charcoal with water to create the first wet-on-dry picture on a cave wall." in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-based solution.

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See also

American beadworkers

Apache people

Kiowa painters

Kiowa women artists

Native American beadworkers

Native American people from Oklahoma

Native American women painters

San Ildefonso Pueblo people

Women beadworkers

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clara_Archilta