







Allan Houser
receives National Medal of the Arts in 1992
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Allan at
the entrance to his sculpture gardens in 1992
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Born
on June 30, 1914, Allan C. Haozous was to become known as Allan Houser,
one of the 20th Century's most important artists. Allan's parents,
Sam and Blossom Haozous were members of the Chiricahua Apache tribe
who were held as prisoner's of war for 27 years. Allan's father was
with the small band of Warm Springs Chiricahuas when their leader,
Geronimo, surrendered to the U.S. Army in 1886 in the northern Mexican
state of Chihuahua. In retribution for the Warm Springs Bands' refusal
to leave their lands in New Mexico and relocate to a reservation in
Arizona, 1200 Chiricahuas were sent by cattle-car train to prisons
in Florida.
Allan's father was among the women and children jailed at the Castillo
de San Marcos in St. Augustine, Florida, and Allan's mother was born
in the prison camp at the Mount Vernon Barracks, Alabama where surviving
members of the tribe were sent in 1887. As a final solution, the last
of the Chircahuas were sent to Fort Sill, Oklahoma where they remained
captives for 23 years. Freed at last in 1914, a majority of the tribe
returned to New Mexico to join with the Mescalero Apaches for whom
a reservation had been created. Allan's parents, however, were with
a small group of families who chose to stay in Oklahoma and create
farms in the Apache and Lawton communities. Allan was born just months
after their release, the first child born out of captivity.
Growing up on the farm, Allan labored with crops of cotton and alfalfa
and helped support the family growing vegetables and raising livestock
and horses. At an early age he became interested in the images he
saw in magazines and books. He soon began making his own drawings
and carvings. In 1934 a notice for an art school in Santa Fe attracted
his attention, and he enrolled in the Painting School at the Santa
Fe Indian School. Commonly known as the Dorothy Dunn School after
its prominent teacher, Allan became its most famous student and by
1939 his work was exhibited in San Francisco, Washington D. C., and
Chicago. In the same year he received a commission to paint a mural
in the Department of Interior building in Washington, and its success
led to a second mural commission there in 1940.
Allan married Anna Marie Gallegos in 1939, and together with three
young sons they moved to Los Angeles in 1941 where Allan sought employment
during the war effort. It was here that Allan would have the opportunity
to visit museum exhibitions of European modernists such as Brancusi,
Arp, Lipschitz, and Henry Moore, whose work would have a lasting influence
on Allan as his own style evolved in the succeeding decades.
In 1947 Allan was commissioned by the Haskell Institute in Lawrence,
Kansas, to do a memorial sculpture honoring the Native American students
from Haskell who had died in World War II. Completed in 1948, this
work entitled "Comrade in Mourning" was his first major marble carving.
In 1951 Allan moved to Brigham City, Utah, where he taught art at
the Inter-Mountain Indian School for the next eleven years. He continued
to paint and produce small wooden sculptures, and in 1954 he was honored
by the French government with the Palmes d'Acadamique for his outstanding
achievement as a teacher and artist.
In 1962 Allan was asked to join the faculty of the newly created Institute
of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe. There he created the sculpture
department and began focusing his own artistic output on three-dimensional
work. As he taught and created sculpture he began integrating the
aesthetics of the modernists with his narrative ideas. By the late
1960's he began exhibiting this sculpture and recognition of his unique
style grew. Museums and private collectors sought out examples, and
his influence became apparent on hundreds of students and other artists.
In 1975 Allan retired from teaching to devote himself full-time to
his own work. In the two following decades he would produce close
to 1,000 sculptures in stone, wood, and bronze, and emerged as a major
figure on an international scale. He had nearly 50 solo exhibitions
in museums and galleries in the United States, Europe, and Asia, and
he continued working tirelessly until his death on August 22, 1994.
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