Anita Fields: Artist Talk

Wednesday, April 7, 2021
6:00 PM EST, online event

Born in Oklahoma, Anita Fields (Osage/Muscogee) creates works of clay and textile that reflect Osage worldviews, including notions of duality, earth and sky, and male and female. In an effort to understand our shared existence, Fields asks viewers to consider other ways of seeing and being, and she employs heavily textured layers and distorted writing to reference the complex layers and distortion of truths found in the written history of Indigenous cultures. Landscapes, environment, and the powerful influences of nature are themes found throughout her work, reflecting how we understand our surroundings and visualize our place within the world, time, place, and how the earth holds the memory of cultures who once called a specific terrain home.   
 
Fields just received the prestigious 2021 Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship, and is currently 2017-2020 fellow with the Kaiser Foundation’s Tulsa Artist Fellowship. She has been included in many exhibitions including the recent Hearts of Our People and Art for A New Understanding, and was featured in American CraftMs Magazine, American Style, and First American Art. Her work is in the collections of the Minneapolis Institute of Art; Crystal Bridges Museum; Museum of Art and Design, New York; Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe; Heard Museum; Eiteljorg Museum; National Museum of the American Indian; Osage Tribal Museum; Hood Museum; Fred Jones Museum of Art; Sam Noble Museum; National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum; State of Oklahoma Art Collection; among others.

Registration is required: register at https://virginia.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iq4wwq13Tg-ZVmpzYp9AnQ

You can also drop in to her class visit on March 23 from 1:00- 3:00 PM EST by logging into Zoom at https://virginia.zoom.us/j/98454067491?pwd=UHByN3FGZE50bEl3dG5SakhoMkc1UT09 (Meeting ID: 984 5406 7491 and Passcode: 072040).

image: Anita Fields, When Considering the Earth and Sky
Clay, slips, gold luster glaze, 2020
44 x 33 x 1 1/2 in.
© Anita Fields