Nadema Ivania Agard, who also uses the name Winyan Luta Red Woman, (born September 10, 1948) is an American visual artist, educator, illustrator, poet, storyteller, museum professional and an activist for Indigenous rights. Agard also works as a consultant on repatriation, multicultural arts, and Native American arts and cultures. Additionally, Agard owns and directs an art production and consulting enterprise, Red Earth Studio.
Agard's art is primarily mixed media visual arts, ranging from canvas paintings, sketches, and published works and her intent is to show the relations of femininity and masculinity in various mixed medias. Her goal is also to represent the merging of cultures races, religions, and traditions together, as well as to serve as a form of visual worship.
Early and personal life
Agard was born and raised in New York, where she has lived most of her life. Agard was exposed to art at a very young age, as her father was a portrait artist and muralist. She has credited this constant exposure to art as an early inspiration for her choice to create art herself. Agard grew up in New York, where she has family.
Agard is of Lakota, Powhatan, and Cherokee ancestry.
In the early 2000s, Agard was diagnosed with breast cancer, but she overcame it. She took a hiatus from making art until creating Moon Breast Mother in 2003.
She lives in her hometown of New York City.
Education
In June 1970, Agard earned a bachelor of science degree in art education from New York University. Three years later, she continued her education in New York and completed a master's program, earning a master of art degree in art in education at Columbia University, TeacherâÂÂs College in December 1973. Between the years of living in New York and pursuing higher education, Agard spent two summers studying in Europe. At the UniversitàCattolica di Milano of Rome, Italy, in Summer 1969, Agard studied Renaissance art and Architecture. And in Greece at the Aegina Arts Centre, she studied fine arts through Summer 1972.
Career
After earning her first degree in art and education, Agard began to teach art in the New York City Public School system for 15 years on and off. In 1975, Holiday House of New York published a children's book, ChiChi HooHoo Bogey Man, written by Virginia Dewing Hawk and illustrated by Agard.
In 1979, Agard begin exhibiting her work. Via Gambaro Gallery, which was launched by Retha Walden Gambaro and Stephen Gambaro to spotlight contemporary Native American artists, included Agard's work in its 1980 National American Indian Women's Art Show.
In 1981, she left teaching to run the Native arts program, "So the Spirit Flows" at the Museum of the American Indian until 1988 when she received a NEA Fellowship to eventually publish her Southeastern Native Arts Directory at Bemidji State University in Minnesota where she was an adjunct professor of studio arts and art education. From 1995 to 1997 she became the Repatriation Director for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and in the early 2000s, she accepted the position of Community Outreach Specialist for the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian. After leaving the museum, Agard has taken several roles as a guest curator, and has used her time to give lectures and create artwork. She continued to serve as a lecturer for the New York Council for the Humanities for many years. She continued to give lectures and curate at various universities and museums locally and nationally.
Artworks
Our Lady of Guadalakota
Our Lady of Guadalakota is a sepia pencil drawing by Agard created in 1997 that symbolizes the fusion of the Mesoamerica goddess Tonantzin, also seen as the Virgin of Guadalupe, with the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Woman of the Lakota people.
Moon Breast Mother: An Installation
Moon Breast Mother: An Installation is a mixed-media soft sculpture that includes acrylic paint on a canvas. It consists of ten pieces and each square is 12 by 12 inches.
Agard created the work in 2003 after she overcame breast cancer. She created each of the moons to be a soft sculpture that reflects a womanâÂÂs body in many phases and per Patricia Janis Broder, shows the ongoing theme of her art that highlights female genitalia in a more open perspective. After showing this piece in a solo exhibition in 2003, Agard now keeps the ten-piece installation in her home in New York.
Wampum Moons of Change
Wampum Moons of Change is a 12-piece installation, with a similar format to her piece âÂÂMoon Breast MotherâÂÂ. It was created in 2009 for the Staten Island Museum collection, âÂÂCONTACT 1609âÂÂ. This is also a soft sculpture mixed media piece on a canvas with acrylic paint. Each piece of this installation is a 12âÂÂx12â square, each with a different symbol that represents both Native American and Dutch cultures. Purple and creme paints are displayed through each square, each containing images including shells, corn, various animals, and even writing that says âÂÂhalf moonâÂÂ. None of the twelve images repeat, and hanging below the twelve-piece installation is a sweet grass braid with purple ribbon.
Publications
- "Art as a Vehicle for Empowerment" in Voices of Color: Art and Society in the Americas (1997, edited by Phoebe Farris-Dufrene)
- The Chichi Hoohoo Bogeyman (illustrations, 2008)
- National Museum of the American Indian: Native Artists in the Americas (Brief introduction/guide to interpreting and understanding the art she created while in the program of this museum.)
Exhibitions
Nadema Agard has had her work in various solo and group exhibitions since 1979. The majority of her work was found in group exhibitions in New York, Minnesota, Arizona and nationwide.
Solo exhibitions
- 1992: âÂÂSacred DoorâÂÂ, Woodland Pattern Gallery, Milwaukee, WI
- 1993: âÂÂDoor to Heaven-Door From HeavenâÂÂ, Gustavus Adolphus College, Schaefer Gallery, St. Peter, MN
- 1994: âÂÂShe is the Four DirectionsâÂÂ, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN
- 1997: âÂÂStarblanket HeavenâÂÂ, Bismarck Art Gallery Association, Bismarck, ND
- 2003: âÂÂParfleche Visions and Moon Breast MothersâÂÂ, New Century Artists, New York
Group exhibitions
- 1979: âÂÂInvitational 79âÂÂ, Gallery of the American Indian Community House, Soho, NY
- 1980: âÂÂNational American Indian WomenâÂÂs Art ShowâÂÂ, Via Gambaro Gallery, Washington, D.C.
- 1980: âÂÂSo the Spirit FlowsâÂÂ, Museum of the American Indian, New York
- 1980: âÂÂAt the Edge of the WoodlandsâÂÂ, Native American Center for the Living Arts, Niagara Falls, NY
- 1980: âÂÂVoices Expressing What Is: Action Against Racism in the ArtsâÂÂ, Westbeth Gallery, New York
- 1981: âÂÂInvitational 81âÂÂ, Gallery of the American Indian Community House, Soho, NY
- 1981: âÂÂVisions of the EarthâÂÂ, Native American Rights Fund Annual Show, Boulder, CO
- 1981: Gallery of the 21st Century, Santa Fe, NM
- 1981: âÂÂFour DirectionsâÂÂ, Gallery for the American Indian Community House, Soho, NY
- 1981: âÂÂNight of the First AmericansâÂÂ, Atrium Gallery, Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C
- 1981: âÂÂNative Americans, the Women and Their ArtâÂÂ, NYU Contemporary Art Gallery, New York
- 1982: âÂÂNative Women ArtistsâÂÂ, Gallery of the American Indian Community House, Soho
- 1983: âÂÂTwenty Six Horses GalleryâÂÂ, Soho, NY
- 1984: âÂÂArtistas Indigenas Traveling ExhibitâÂÂ, Portland, OR
- 1984: âÂÂWE ARE THE SEVENTH GENERATIONâÂÂ, Native American Indian Media Corporation traveling exhibit, Atlanta, GA
- 1986: âÂÂThe Artist and the Spiritual QuestâÂÂ, WomenâÂÂs Caucus for the Art, Soho
- 1986: âÂÂRiders with No HorseâÂÂ, Gallery of the American Indian Community House, Soho, NY
- 1987: âÂÂNative America: Life, Legend and ArtâÂÂ, Trenton, NJ
- 1988: âÂÂA National Women of Color Artist Book ExhibitionâÂÂ, Houston, TX
- 1989: âÂÂA National Women of Color Artist Book ProjectâÂÂ, Center for Book Arts Coast to Coast, Soho, NY
- 1990: âÂÂAncestors Known and Unknown-BoxworksâÂÂ, Arts in General, Coast to Coast, Tribeca, NY
- 1991: âÂÂAll Over the Map: Women and PlaceâÂÂ, Moorhead, MN
- 1991: âÂÂManhattan Days: Prairie DazeâÂÂ, Bemidji Community Art Center, a two-person installation/exhibition, Bemidji, MN
- 1992: âÂÂVisual Arts Faculty ExhibitionâÂÂ, Talley Gallery of Bemidji State University, Bemidji, MN
- 1992: âÂÂEarth Art: Visions and Interpretations of Nature Through Environmentally Sensitive ArtâÂÂ, Associated Artists of Winston-Salem, Winston-Salem, NC
- 1993: âÂÂVisual Arts FacultyâÂÂ, Talley Gallery of Bemidji State University, Bemidji, MN
- 1993: âÂÂRetablos-Latino Icons,â United Community Center Gallery of the Americas, Milwaukee, WI
- 1994: âÂÂGathering Medicine ExhibitionâÂÂ, Art in General, Coast to Coast-Women of Color in the Arts, Tribeca, NY
- 1994: âÂÂWorld's Women On-Line coordinated by Muriel Magenta,â United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China, Visual Arts Coordinator, Institute for Studies in the Arts, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona
- 1994: âÂÂNative Survival: Response to HIV/AIDSâÂÂ, Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ
- 1994: âÂÂNative Survival: Response to HIV/AIDSâÂÂ, Hartwick College, Oneonta, NY
- 1994: âÂÂVirgin of Guadalupe Is the Corn Mother, a Multimedia WorkâÂÂ, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
- 1996: âÂÂNative Survival: Response to HIV/AIDSâÂÂ, Two Rivers Gallery, Minneapolis, MN
- 1996: âÂÂAmerican Indian College Fund Gala AuctionâÂÂ, Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York
- 1996: âÂÂVoices of ColorâÂÂ, Purdue University Gallery, West Lafayette, IN
- 1996: âÂÂFrida Kahlo, Modern Portraits ofàModern IdonâÂÂ, Frasier Gallery, Georgetown, Washington D.C.
- 1997: âÂÂPiecevvorksâÂÂ, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York
- 1999 - 1998: âÂÂMetaphors: Art Inspired By Everyday Objects and FolkloreâÂÂ, New York
- 2000: âÂÂMother Love: Native Women and the LandâÂÂ, New York Gallery of the American Indian Community House, New York
- 2002 - 2001: âÂÂWho is the Virgin of Guadalupe? Women Artists Crossing BordersâÂÂ, Henry Street Settlement Abrons Art Center, New York
- 2002: âÂÂStories from the Circle: Science and Native WisdomâÂÂ, The Ned Hatathli Museum, Diné College, Tsaile, AZ
- 2003: âÂÂNative American Artists/Scholars: Speaking for Ourselves in the 21stâ Gallery of the American Indian Community House, New York
- 2004: âÂÂNative Views: Influences of Modern CultureâÂÂ, Artrain U.S.A. (Traveling Show 2004-2007)
- 2005: âÂÂImpacted NationsâÂÂ, Honor the Earth (Traveling Show 2005-2008)
- 2005-2006: âÂÂAn Artistic Perspective, Lady Liberty as a Native American IconâÂÂ, Gallery of Ellis Island Immigration Museum, New York
- 2005: âÂÂNew York Mix: Art of the Five Civilized Boroughsâ Gallery of the American Indian Community House, New York
- 2008-2007: âÂÂáFRIJOLITOS!: A SMALL WORKS EXHIBITIONâÂÂ, Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop, Tucson, AZ
- 2009: âÂÂContact 1609â Staten Island Museum, Staten Island
- 2009: âÂÂThe Importance of in/visibility, Abrazo Interno Gallery, New York
- 2015: âÂÂHow to Catch Eel and Grow CornâÂÂ, Wilmer Jennings Gallery, New York
Collections
- American Indian Community House Gallery (AICH Gallery): Cultural Center in the Lower Manhattan Area
- Powhatan Museum: is located in the historic Mt. Pleasant neighborhood (Washington DC)
Honors and awards
- (2003) Ingrid Washinawatok Award for Community Activism: Ingrid Washinawatok was an activist and Native leader before being murdered on a trip to Columbia to work with indigenous groups. The award is given in her honor, and in 2003 Nadema Agard was the recipient.
- (1997) Smithsonian Institution American Indian Museum Studies Scholarship.
- (1988) Scholar-in-Residence at the Phelps Stokes Institute
- (1987-1988) National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
References
External links