Marcus Amerman facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Marcus Amerman
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Born | 1959 Phoenix, Arizona, United States
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Nationality | Choctaw Nation United States |
Education | BFA Whitman College, College of Santa Fe (now Santa Fe University of Art and Design), Institute of American Indian Arts, Anthropology Film Center |
Known for | Beadwork, glass art, painting, fashion design, performance |
Movement | Photorealism, Native pop |
Marcus Amerman is a Choctaw Nation bead artist, glass artist, painter, fashion designer, and performance artist, living in Idaho. He is known for his highly realistic beadwork portraits.
Background
Marcus Amerman was born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1959 but grew up in the Pacific Northwest. At the age of 10, his aunt taught him the techniques for Native American beadwork. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. He also studied the Institute of American Indian Arts and the Anthropology Film Center.
Artwork
His exploration of so many different genres of art overlap each other. For instance, Amerman's beadwork is integrated into clothing design. His outfits are featured in his performance art. His paintings and glasswork use a vivid palette that is found in his beadwork. He has even create giant beads out of glass.
Amerman's first foray into realism in beadwork was his 1993 Iron Horse Jacket, a studded leather jacket featuring a highly detailed and modeled image of Brooke Shields in beadwork. Later, he added portrait bracelets to his repertoire. He has portrayed many historical heroes in his beadwork, such as Lloyd Kiva New; as well a pop icons, such as Janet Jackson, and imagery inspired by comic superheroes is a current running throughout his work.
His paintings are expressive and often reflect his Choctaw roots, with Mississippian imagery. His work in glass also includes Mississippian ceramic designs, but more often reflects contemporary designs, such as globes of the earth.
Selected public collections
Amerman's work is in such public collections as the George Gustav Heye Center, the National Museum of the American Indian, the American Museum of Natural History, the Heard Museum, the Portland Art Museum, the Wheelwright Museum in Santa Fe, the Sequoyah National Research Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, and the Museum of Arts and Design. .....
Honours and awards
In 2008, Amerman was a Hauberg Fellow at the Pilchuck Glass School and artist-of-residence there in 2008. In 2014 he was awarded a USA Fellow, an award supported by the Rasmuson Foundation. He and Tlingit artist Preston Singletary both taught at the school in 2006 as part of Iconoglass.
Personal
Amerman's brother, Roger Amerman, is also an award-winning beadworker, inspired by Southeastern Woodland designs. Their first cousin, Linda Lomahaftewa is renowned for her printmaking and painting, as was her brother and Amerman's cousin, the late Dan Lomahaftewa. Amerman lives on the Nez Perce Indian Reservation in Kooshia, Idaho, with his elderly parents.