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A
professional artist since 1983, Shonto spends his time painting
and speaking to audiences of all ages. His art has been shown
in more than 50 shows in galleries and museums including The
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe, the American
Indian Contemporary Arts 's museum in San Francisco and Phoenix
Art Museum.
Shonto
attended Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding schools all over the
Navajo Reservation and high school in Kayenta. He received an
Associate's of Fine Art degree at the Institute of American Indian
Arts in Santa Fe, and a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from California
College of Arts and Crafts.
He
worked as a National Park Service ranger for ten years at Grand
Teton National Park in Wyoming and Navajo National Monument in
Arizona. |
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Shonto
speaks to audiences of all ages. He presents his personal history
as a Navajo who happens to draw upon his culture in its modern
context. He illustrates his talks with slides and prints and
gives short art lessons to students.
"I
have always had a love for art. From a very young age, I found
excitement in the experience of drawing. To recreate facets of
my universe in varying degrees has always been my life's adventure.
I
was born in a hogan in Shonto, Arizona. My parents are traditional
Navajo people. My father is a medicine man, and my mother weaves
rugs and herds sheep.
My
message is simple. Build bridges through the arts and stories
of your culture, validate and share these visions and voices.
Celebrate your personal identity through the arts. In my talks,
I am as much a student as I am a teacher," says Shonto. |