Tammy Garcia is an American sculptor and ceramic artist. Garcia translates Pueblo pottery forms and iconography into sculptures in bronze and other media.
Tammy Garcia (born Tammy Borts) was born in Los Angeles, California, in August 1969. A member of the Santa Clara Pueblo in Norther New Mexico, she comes from a long line of Santa Clara Pueblo artists. Her great-great-great-grandmother Sara Fina Tafoya was a potter. Additionally, her great-great aunt, Margaret Tafoya, was a noted potter of the early 20th century, along with her sister, Christina Naranjo. Subsequent generations of potters in Garcia's family included her grandmother, Mary Cain, and her mother, Linda Cain.
Garcia grew up in Santa Clara Pueblo, near Española, New Mexico. While her mother was at work, she stayed with her grandmother, Mary Cain, where she made small animals out of clay. Garcia also helped her grandmother by disposing of the used manure from the pottery-making process. From a young age, she learned to respect the clay pots, and by the age of sixteen, she had learned how to make pottery herself by watching her mother and grandmother. Although Garcia began selling her pots, she initially doubted whether she could actually make a living from it.
Garcia attended high school in Española, but left after 10th grade, later earning her G.E.D. Instead of continuing her education in traditional academics, she chose to train as a cosmetologist or hairdresser. However, three months into her training, a client complained about her haircut, which led to a disagreement with her instructor. This experience made Garcia realize that she did not like being given orders, so she abandoned this career path. She got a job as a dishwasher at a local restaurant, but it only lasted two weeks. Afterwards, Garcia decided that making pottery would be a better way to earn a living. She and her sister moved to Taos, New Mexico, where she continued to refine her pottery-making skills.
After moving to Taos, Garcia took a job at a local art gallery. The steady income from the gallery allowed her to cover her bills and spend more time on her craft. Within the year, her success in selling her pottery enabled her to reduce her hours at the gallery to part-time. By the time she turned 18, Garcia had transitioned to creating pottery full-time and exhibited her work at the Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial in Gallup, NM, one of the oldest showcases of Native American arts, dance, and music in the country. By the age of 21, in 1990, she had won her first ribbon at the Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial and gained representation at the gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Garcia decided to reject the market's expectations for Pueblo potters, believing they promoted an unrealistic notion of authenticity. She was determined not to succumb to market pressures that might compromise her independence and integrity. Despite being advised that her unconventional work would not sell, she and her husband, who she married in 1990, devised a plan to maintain control over her art by avoiding wholesalers and collaborating only with selected galleries. Gallery 10 in Santa Fe quickly sold every piece she created.
In 1998, Garcia and her husband opened Blue Rain Gallery in Taos, which exclusively represented her work, moving the gallery to Santa Fe eight years later. In 1999, she began sculpting with bronze, a transition that Garcia felt stimulated her creativity and artistic inspiration. Over time, she expanded artistry to also include designing and making silver jewelry, as well as working with glass.
Garcia was living in Taos, New Mexico.