Description: [NATIVE AMERICAN ART, R.C. GORMAN, SIGNED ART BOOKS] GORMAN, R.C. (Author) "THE RADIANCE OF MY PEOPLE" Albuquerque. Santa Fe Fine Arts. 1992. First Edition (stated). 184 pp. Oblong quarto (10.5 x 14 in). 127 full page plates in addition to other illustrations. Original full red cloth with gilt title on top panel. Complete with original dust jacket. About near fine condition as shown. THIS COPY SIGNED BY GORMAN IN NOVEMBER 1992. ______________________ Rudolph Carl Gorman (July 26, 1931 – November 3, 2005) was a Native American artist of the Navajo Nation. Referred to as "the Picasso of American Indian artists" by The New York Times, his paintings are primarily of Native American women and characterized by fluid forms and vibrant colors, though he also worked in sculpture, ceramics, and stone lithography. He was also an avid lover of cuisine, authoring four cookbooks, (with accompanying drawings) called Nudes and Food. Rudolph Carl Gorman was born in Chinle, Arizona. His mother was Adele Katherine Brown and his father was Carl Nelson Gorman. His father, Carl, was one of the original twenty-nine Navajo Code Talkers, who, along with his colleagues, developed the unbreakable code American forces used in the Pacific Theater during World War II. R. C. Gorman grew up in a traditional Navajo hogan, and began drawing at age 3. His grandmother helped raise him, recounting Navajo legends and enumerating his genealogy of artist ancestors. She kindled his desire to become an artist. While tending sheep in Canyon de Chelly with his aunts, he used to draw on the rocks, sand, and mud, and made sculptures with the clay, with his earliest subjects including Mickey Mouse and Shirley Temple. He credited a teacher, Jenny Lind at Ganado Presbyterian Mission School, for his inspiration to become a full-time artist. After he left high school, he served in the United States Navy before entering college, where he majored in literature and minored in art at Northern Arizona University. In 1958, he received the first scholarship from the Navajo Tribal Council to study outside of the United States, and enrolled in the art program at Mexico City College. There he learned of and was influenced by the work of Diego Rivera. He later studied art at San Francisco State University, where he also worked as a model. He was openly gay. Please email any questions -
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