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Santa Fe Indian Market hosts 1,000 Indigenous artists in its 102nd year

Leamya Brown models a dress designed by Southern Ute and Navajo designer Adrian Standing Elk Pinnecoose at SWAIA's 102nd annual Santa Fe Indian Market.
Clark Adomaitis
/
KSUT/KSJD
Leamya Brown models a dress designed by Southern Ute and Navajo designer Adrian Standing Elk Pinnecoose at SWAIA's 102nd annual Santa Fe Indian Market.

On hot and sunny streets surrounded by adobe buildings, the Santa Fe Plaza and downtown teemed with thousands of Indigenous artists . They stood at booths as tourists bought jewelry, food vendors sold frybread, and private galleries drew tourists in.

Melissa Lewis Barnes is a Navajo artist who lives in Durango. She’s one of 1,000 Indigenous artists selected to appear at th is year's two-day Santa Fe Indian Market .

The annual event features more than a thousand Indigenous artisans from across the country and is the largest juried Native American art show in the world.

Barnes explained how to create her handmade beaver fur cowboy hats as tourists walked by her booth.

“I do hand-painted artwork and use the hats as a canvas ,” said Barnes. “I punch it up with some cool beaded loom-beaded hat bands. I do braiding around the edges. My goal is to make a hat stand out. It really should be a showstopper. I know I'm sharing my work with the absolute best of the best in the Native world . ”

Linda Baker, from Oxford, and Melissa Lewis Barnes, from Durango, displayed their beadwork and hatmaking at the 102nd Santa Fe Indian Market.
Linda Baker, from Oxford, and Melissa Lewis Barnes, from Durango, displayed their beadwork and hatmaking at the 102nd Santa Fe Indian Market.

Barnes shared a booth with Linda Baker, a former Southern Ute tribal council member. Baker present ed her traditional Southern Ute regalia.

“This is a boy's cradleboard. It's probably about, I don't know, two and a half, three feet tall ,” said Baker. “It's fully beaded on the top, it's got the banner that goes across the front, plus a fully beaded cover where the lacing goes. That's not only maybe a piece of art to some people, but it's also utilitarian . ”

Baker was one of four Southern Ute tribal members with a booth at the market this year.

Artists, performers, and tourists fill the streets of downtown Santa Fe at the Santa Fe Indian Market.
Clark Adomaitis
/
KSUT/KSJD
Artists, performers, and tourists fill the streets of downtown Santa Fe at the Santa Fe Indian Market.

Sisters Karen Box Anderson and Debra Box are Southern Ute, living in Colorado Springs. Their father is from Ignacio, Colorado. They shar ed a booth. Karen Box Anderson sold her jewelry, and Debra Box displayed her beadwork and rawhide work. This year was Debra’s 37th appearance at the market.

“This is hand-scraped rawhide ,” explained Box. “I use a beef hide, and I paint it with earth pigments and outline it in India ink. I use brain-tanned deer hide. I use the small beads. I like to use size 13, up to as small as grains of salt. You can get a lot more detail in your beadwork design if you use a smaller bead . ”

Musical performances, artist presentations, and a fashion show took place over the weekend. At the Native Fashion Show, Indigenous models strutted the runway wearing Indigenous-designed fashion pieces.

Jaime Luis Gomez, known as Taboo from Black Eyed Peas, introduces the Native Fashion Show at the Santa Fe Indian Market.
Clark Adomaitis
/
KSUT/KSJD
Jaime Luis Gomez, known as Taboo from Black Eyed Peas, introduces the Native Fashion Show at the Santa Fe Indian Market.

Copyright 2024 Four Corners Public Radio

Clark Adomaitis