Coyote dancer with flute

Coyote Dancer with Flute, 1983
Acrylic wash on paper

Deer dancers

Deer Dancers, 1979
Serigraph

Four women dancers holding burden baskets

Gift from California, 1979
Serigraph

Bear dancer

Bear Dancer, 1979
Serigraph

coyote dancer in tank top

Coyote Dancer in tank top, 1981
Lithograph

Olé Ham Nees: We Call Him Coyote
Exhibition Subtitle
Harry Fonseca Works from the Shingle Springs Band Collection

Exhibit Length
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The solo-exhibition features the artwork of Harry Fonseca drawn from the Shingle Springs Band Collection.  Embracing the lifework of this former tribal citizen, the Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians acquired an important collection of works spanning his career. 

The exhibition considers multiple series and stylistic shifts from his earliest pieces reflecting his Maidu heritage, the Coyote series for which he is most recognized, the influences of rock art in Stone Poems, the political views of Discovery of Gold and Souls in California, to the abstraction and examination of painting in the Stripes and Seasons series.

 

About the Artist

Harry Fonseca (1946-2006) was born in Sacramento, of Nisenan Maidu, Hawaiian, and Portuguese heritage, and an enrolled citizen of the Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians. In his twenty-year career as an exhibiting artist, Harry Fonseca's work has gone through a number of transformations, but the one constant has been his openness to new influences and sources of inspiration.

Fonseca's earliest pieces draw from his Maidu heritage. He was influenced by basketry designs, dance regalia, and by his participation as a traditional dancer. Another level of transformation occurred in 1979 when Coyote emerged as the subject in his prolific and most well-known series. Coyote, the trickster and transformer, is re-contextualized by the artist as a culture hero in a variety of contemporary settings. 

Fonseca's continuing interest in rock art led him to develop Stone Poems, an extensive series of works exploring the imagery of petroglyphs throughout the West and Southwest. The canvases, some as large as 6' by 12', suggest the size and scope of petroglyphic panels in situ.

Fonseca's work took a more political turn with the 1992 Discovery of Gold and Souls in California series. Each of these small mixed-media pieces, offer subtle variations on the image of a black cross surrounded by gold leaf and partially covered with red oxide. Fonseca has stated that this series "is a direct reference to the physical, emotional and spiritual genocide of the native people of California. With the rise of the mission system, and much later the discovery of gold in California, the native world was fractured, and with it, a way of life and order devastated." (http://www.harryfonseca.com/)

Into the 1990-2000s, in a radical stylistic shift, Fonseca embraced a non-representational format that reflected his examination of the physical properties of painting through the series Stripes and Seasons


Several related events will be announced soon!

Sponsors
  • Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians
  • The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Art Museum Futures Fund
  • UC Davis College of Letters & Science
  • shingle springs logo
  • Mellon Foundation