Encyclopedia of the Great Plains

David J. Wishart, Editor


HOUSER, ALLAN (1914-1994)

One of the most influential Native American artists of the twentieth century, Houser was of Chiricahua heritage; his grandfather was warchief Mangus Coloradas, and his granduncle was Geronimo. Houser was born in Apache, Oklahoma, on June 30, 1914, and grew up near Fort Sill. His early life was filled with stories of Chiricahua resistance. In the 1930s he attended the Indian School in Santa Fe, working with Dorothy Dunn in the Studio. The flat, two-dimensional painting style developed there was too restrictive for Houser, although he executed various Studio-style murals, including some in the Department of the Interior Building in Washington dc. He studied muralism with Olaf Nordmark, who suggested that he turn to sculpture. Beginning in wood, Houser quickly explored other materials, including bronze, marble, and steel. He taught at the Inter-Mountain Boarding School in Utah between 1951 and 1961 and in Santa Fe at the new Institute of American Indian Arts from 1962 to 1975. The institute was founded on principles that Houser held to be deeply important: that Native American artists should be encouraged to explore their cultural heritage as well as to create art in keeping with their own individual goals and self-expression. At sixty-one, he officially stopped teaching to devote his energies to his own art, but he never stopped helping students.

Numerous awards filled his life, including a Guggenheim Fellowship (1948) and the French Palmes d'Académiques (1954) for his exemplary work as both artist and teacher. He was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame and, in 1992, was the first Native American to receive the National Medal of Arts. His unceasing experimentation and creativity were expressed in subject matter that ranged from representations of Native figures of the past to contemporary abstractions without recognizable imagery. Houser died on August 22, 1994, in Santa Fe.

Joyce M. Szabo University of New Mexico

Allan Houser (Ha-o-zous): A Life in Art. Exhibition Catalog. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico, 1991.

Perlman, Barbara H. Allan Houser (Ha-o-zous). Boston: David R. Godine, 1987.

The Studio of Allan Houser. Exhibition Catalog. Santa Fe: Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, 1996.

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