Joan M. Tenenbaum is an American linguist, anthropologist and artist specializing in metalsmithing and jewelry. She is also known for her documentation of the DenaâÂÂina language as for her jewelry pieces which tell the stories of Alaska native peoples and landscape.
Tenenbaum discovered jewelry making at the age of 13 while in the ninth grade. She studied Romance languages and Anthropology and received her B.A. from the University of Michigan. She attended graduate school in Anthropology and Linguistics and received her Ph.D. from Columbia University. Research for her dissertation took her to Nondalton, a small village in rural Alaska where she lived for two years in order to document the DenaâÂÂina language. In the succeeding two years she wrote a grammar of the DenaâÂÂina verb for her dissertation, Morphology and Semantics of the Tanaina Verb, and compiled a preliminary dictionary of the endangered language. She also translated and compiled 24 stories which she had recorded and transcribed in Nondalton, for her book DenaâÂÂina SukduâÂÂa: Traditional Stories of the Tanaina Athabaskans, first published in 1976. Both the dissertation and the collection of DenaâÂÂina stories are still regarded by linguists today as among the finest in the field.
After completing her Ph.D. Tenenbaum lived with YupâÂÂik and Iñupiat peoples in several other Alaskan villages, teaching and coordinating rural delivery programs for the University of Alaska, among them the X-CED Program. During all these years, she continued to make jewelry and never gave up her dream to one day be a full-time artist.
In 1982 Tenenbaum changed directions and began to devote herself to her jewelry making career, studying with a personal mentor, and pursuing classes, challenging herself to master the most difficult techniques. In time, the life-changing experiences of being welcomed and loved by Alaskan village communities began to surface in her jewelry work. Additionally, she has continued to go back to Alaska and visit the peoples she lived with. What has resulted is a synthesis of an Anthropologist's perspective with a lifelong dedication to the art of jewelry making.
As her understanding of diverse cultures and the landscapes they inhabit has deepened over time, and as her expertise in goldsmithing has evolved, TenenbaumâÂÂs jewelry has become increasingly intricate and refined, reflecting a thoughtful engagement with humanityâÂÂs relationship to the natural world.
Each piece is entirely hand-fabricated, combining precious metals, gemstones, cloisonné enameling, and a wide array of metalsmithing and goldsmithing techniques.
Her work conveys narratives drawn from the communities with whom she has lived, explores the ways people interact with their surroundings, and evokes places of striking beauty. Collectively, the pieces function as wearable miniature landscapes that integrate cultural perspectives with ecological awareness.