-40%

“Redwing Nez ©83” original signed canvas painting; 16” w x 20” h

$ 528

Availability: 25 in stock
  • Culture: Native American: US
  • Condition: Used
  • Provenance: Ownership History Available
  • Tribal Affiliation: Navajo
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

    Description

    Redwing Nez’s Stories:
    https://issuu.com/ibuildmagazines/docs/indiantrader1019/s/158995
    https://www.nhonews.com/news/nez-to-paint-60-foot-mural-in-flagstaff/article_e3f6b4bf-62ed-59d5-ad2d-5b9b87d70eca.html
    This painting was purchased from Redwing Ted Nez by Americana Indian Shows by then-co owner Wayne Anderson.  When Wayne passed away in 2018, he also passed this painting on to his family.  Due to downsizing and moving, it is time to say goodbye to this masterpiece by Nez.
    Anderson’s Americana Indian and Western Shows (aka Americana Indian Shows) had its beginning in 1947, when the Anderson family lived with an uncle at his trading post in Sanders, Arizona, adjacent to the Navajo reservation. The Andersons have deep roots in Arizona, first arriving in the state in the mid 1870s.
    The eventual founder of AIS, Lee Anderson, attended 7th grade on the reservation at Sanders’ one-room schoolhouse where he met and became lifelong friends with Frank Yellowhorse, who would later become a well-known award winning Navajo silversmith. After school and on weekends, Lee worked for his uncle at the trading post, where he gained an appreciation for Indian art and culture.
    The family collected American Indian art and later decorated their Phoenix home in this style. They collected Navajo rugs, pottery, baskets, and other Indian and western items. Lee and his brothers started their Indian arts, crafts and jewelry business as a part-time venture in 1968 in addition to their full-time occupations — Lee was a career army officer; Wayne, a game and fish officer in Flagstaff, Arizona; and Arvid, a guidance counselor at Kofa High School in Yuma, Arizona.
    Following Lee’s retirement in 1974, the brothers opened galleries in Sedona and Flagstaff. However, their first love was the road, and they established a wonderfully loyal following in several cities and states throughout the U.S. In the early 1990s, they closed the galleries and dedicated all their resources to conducting shows and sales nationwide.