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George "Shukata"
Willis is an
artist producing wonderfully innovative and original work. Trained
at the Southern California College of Jewelry Design and The Starline
Jewelry in Los Angeles, he has been a professional jeweler since
1964. He operated his own jewelry shop until 1990, when he began
to incorporate themes and images from his American Indian heritage
into his work.
George uses a very wide
variety of material and techniques in his designs. Working with
silver, gold, platinum and a myriad of precious and semi-precious
stones, he creates both one of a kind and limited edition pieces.
To create his editions, he uses lost wax casting. In this process,
a wax model is encased within a mold and then replaced with molten
metal, reproducing the exact original shape in metal. His one of
a kind pieces demonstrate a command of a very wide range of fabrication
techniques, and although his designs are innovative and contemporary,
they clearly express his sense of connection to his Choctaw heritage.
Examples of this are his "Spirit People". Made to represent faces
and figures, Shukata uses unusual stones such as rhodocrosite, Mexican
opal, crystalline mineral druzies, and a variety of agates for the
faces and forms, adorning them with headdresses of precious metal
which call to mind the traditional head gear the Southeastern tribes.
He is a master of designing around the natural features of a stone
so that the patterns in an agate, for example, will echo facial
features.
George Shukata Willis
took the top award at the Indian Arts and Crafts Association annual
Market last October for a gold ring titled "Dancing on the Mesa"
which features a miniature fancy dancer circling a tiny fire. The
dancer actually moves around the top of ring by means of a mechanism
hidden within the ring, a perfect example of how his design sensibility
and technical expertise combine to create award-winning jewelry.
George Shukata Willis was chosen as the Indian Arts and Crafts Association
Artist of the Year for 2000, a well-deserved honor for an exciting
and unique artist.
The Indian Craft Shop represents artists from
over 40 tribal areas within the United States. Located in the Department
of the Interior federal building at 18th and C Streets, the Shop
is open Monday thru Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Closed federal
holidays. Open the third Saturday of each month from 10:00 a.m.
to 4:00 p.m.
Photo ID required for entrance.
For more information, call 202-208-4056.
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