Boy Dancer / Ruthe Blalock Jones
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©Gilcrease Museum
Title(s):
Boy Dancer
Creator(s):
Ruthe Blalock Jones (Artist)
Culture:
Native American; Delaware, Shawnee, Peoria
Date:
2016
Materials/Techniques:
gouache on paper
Paper/Support:
Portrait; single-sided
1.527-1.537mm
White, machine-made, cold press Arches board.
Classification:
Object Type:
Accession No:
02.2097
Previous Number(s):
TL2016.42.3
Department:
Not On View
- Height: 16in. (40.6cm)
- Width: 10 1/8in. (25.7cm)
Creator:
Biography:
Born in Claremore, Oklahoma, Ruthe Blalock Jones is an Indigenous artist and art historian. She was raised in the Native American Church (NAC) by her mother, Lucy Parks Blalock, and her father, Charles Jones, who was a Roadman for the NAC and a Stomp Dance leader at the Shawnee White Oak ceremonial grounds. Blalock Jones’s upbringing within the NAC, as well as her Delaware, Shawnee, and Peoria heritage, inform much of her artwork. For her subjects, she often draws upon relationships to the ceremonies, worldviews, objects, and people who affected her life. Jones’s diverse artistic practice includes painting, drawing, and printmaking.Blalock Jones has had a profound impact on the canon of Indigenous art not only through her contributions as a female artist but also because she intentionally upends Native American racial stereotypes by representing her subjects as individuals and portraying their humanity in intimate detail.“We are artists, teachers, and entrepreneurs; yet we are still singers, dancers, storytellers, shell shakers, stomp dance leaders, and medicine men. We are road men, bead workers, cooks, and ball players—and against all odds, we are still here. By all accounts, we should have disappeared, assimilated into the dominant culture and become extinct. But like our ancestors, the artists before us, we honor those who have gone on as we record for our descendants our ceremonies and our reaction to the forces of American politics and society. We are still here. We are still here!”1—Ruthe Blalock JonesIn 1970, Blalock Jones received an associate’s degree from Bacone College (Muskogee, Oklahoma), where W. Richard “Dick” West (1912–2012) introduced her to Indigenous painting styles such as Kiowa Style or Flatstyle, ledger art, and various other genres. She earned a BFA from the University of Tulsa and eventually a master’s from Northeastern State University. She showed her artwork at the Philbrook Annual Indian Art competition, an event that filled a void by providing a market for Indigenous art in Oklahoma. Blalock Jones served as director emeritus and associate professor of art at Bacone College from 1979 on. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Women’s Hall of Fame in 1995. Throughout her career as an Indigenous art scholar, her research illuminated the vitality and importance of female Indigenous artists, particularly those from Oklahoma. As Blalock Jones said in an interview with Philbrook Museum of Art curator Christina Burke: “Indian women artists are here to stay.”2—Jordan Poorman Cocker, Henry Luce Foundation Curatorial Scholar for Indigenous Painting Collection Research, 2021_____________________________1 Blalock Jones, Depriest, and Fowler, “Oklahoma: A View of the Center,” 41.2 Ruthe Blalock Jones, interview by Christina Burke, Community Conversation, Philbrook Museum of Art, December 9, 2020. Burke, curator of Native American art at the Philbrook Museum of Art, discussed the Philbrook exhibition Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists with Blalock Jones. See “Ruthe Blalock Jones: Community Conversation (Legacy)” on the Philbrook Museum of Art channel on YouTube.
Role(s):
Artist
Names (all):
Blalock Jones, Ruthe
Birth Date:
1939
Nationalities:
American (North American)
Roles:
Native American painter, draftsman, and etcher, born 1939
Gender:
female
Note:
Blalock Jones currently lives in Okmulgee, Oklahoma. She is the Art Director at Bacone College in Muskogee. She was given the Governor's Award in Oklahoma City in 1993.
Signed by hand in gouache, "© 2016 RUTHE BLALOCK JONES" in lower right on recto
bandanas, batons (symbols of office), beadwork, black, blue, boys, bustles, dancers, Delaware Indians, fancy dance, Feathers, female artist, fringe, gauntlets, gray, grey, headbands (headgear), Indigenous paintings included in the Henry Luce Foundation 2020-2022 project, Items included in the Henry Luce Foundation 2020-2022 project, male, Native American, Orange (Color), Peoria, roach headdress, rosettes, Shawnee Indians, tassels, vests (main garments), white, woman artist, yellow
Blalock Jones, Ruthe. Boy Dancer. 02.2097. 2016. Tulsa: Gilcrease Museum, https://collections.gilcrease.org/object/022097 (08/28/2018).
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