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“My life, like my pottery,
is a journey, not a destination,” says Jean Bad Moccasin. It is
a journey that began when Jean was born in a refugee camp in Hanover,
Germany. Jean's maternal grandfather had traveled with Sitting Bull
to Europe with the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show. There he married
a Ukrainian, as did his daughter (Jean's mother). They were returning
home when Jean was born in 1947.
Drawn to pottery of the
Southwest in the 1980s, Jean studied pottery, drawing and painting
in college. In her early years, she was drawn to soft pastels and
southwest designs. In 1999, she was awarded a SWAIA fellowship which
allowed her to research archeological findings of pottery in the
Black Hills of South Dakota.
Jean has gained national
recognition for her contemporary pottery. In 1997, she was selected
to show in the “Legacy of Generations: Pottery by American Indian
Women” exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in
Washington, D.C. She was named as one of the “Avant-Garde” potters
in the show’s publication, Pottery of American Indian Women:
The Legacy of Generations, written by Susan Peterson for the
tour (Abbeville Press, 1997).
Jean uses the coil method
and slab techniques of hand-building clay. She brings a new dimension
to pottery, working with traditional designs in a non-traditional
form for the Northern Plains. The clay becomes a canvas for Lakota
designs inspired by Plains beadwork, shields, winter count drawings
and ledger art. She creates parfleche boxes and pouches, often trimmed
with leather fringe. The use of crème-colored clay can make it seem
that the material is rawhide. Jean is also known for her sculpted
eagles on which she painstakingly carves each feather individually.
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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