Fire Weed
- Artist: Emmi Whitehorse, Navajo, born 1957
- Medium: Pastel and oil on paper mounted on canvas
- Place Made: Madrid, New Mexico, USA
- Dates: 1998
- Dimensions: 39 x 51 in. (99.1 x 129.5 cm)
- Signature: Signed LL verso: "#1179 'FIRE WEED'/7/1998/monogram.../_.horse" Signed LR: "///"
- Collections: Contemporary Art
- Museum Location:
This item is not on view - Accession Number: 2006.49
- Credit Line: Gift of Hinrich Peiper and Dorothee Peiper-Riegraf in honor of Emmi Whitehorse
- Copyright: © Emmi Whitehorse
- Image: Overall, 2006.49_PS1.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2006
In this serene painting, Emmi Whitehorse achieves a unique balance between her modern art training and her Native heritage. Born and raised on the Navajo reservation, she lived with her grandmother and was surrounded by Navajo stories and cultural traditions. For Whitehorse, the Southwest landscape is her identity and the source of her inspiration. In this painting, loosely formed abstractions fill the surface and float in a hazy, fluid medium that could be a mirage of heat or a sandstone cliff. The floating, abstract shapes resemble seeds, pods, and roots of plants, imagery that also relates to Navajo weaving, in which plants are used as dye sources. As a child, Whitehorse collected plants with her grandmother, who hung them on the walls of their house to dry. That is the origin of the floating vegetal forms.
FAQ


ninakuriloff
JoannaLundberg
sassyass
skasta
sagestage
Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum