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Petrified Forest National Park
Artist: Michael Kabotie
 
Michael Kabotie sets up shop on the viewing porch at Painted Desert Inn
Photo by T. Scott Williams/NPS
Michael Kabotie demonstrated his skills and talked with visitors during his time in the park.
 
Kabotie stands next to sandstone wall observing the carved petroglyphs

Photo by T. Scott Williams/NPS

Michael Kabotie studies a petroglyph panel found in the park.

While in the park in late August, Michael Kabotie painted, created jewelry, and explored the American Indian heritage preserved in the park.

Artist Statement

Michael Kabotie was born on September 3, 1942 on the Hopi Indian Reservation and grew up in the village of Shungopavi. While in his junior year at the Haskell Indian School in Lawrence, Kansas, he was invited to spend the summer at the Southwest Indian Art Project at the University of Arizona. After dropping out of college he held a one-man show at the Heard Museum and his work was on the cover of Arizona Highways magazine. In 1967 Michael underwent his Hopi manhood initiation into the Wuwutsim Society and was given his Hopi name, Lomawywesa (Walking in Harmony).

Both Michael and his father, Fred Kabotie, have been innovators in the Native American Fine Arts Movement, creating paintings that reflect traditional Hopi life in contemporary media. In 1973, Michael was a founding member of Artist Hopid, a group of painters experimenting in fresh interpretations of traditional Hopi art forms.

 
Kabotie taking a picture

Photo by T. Scott Williams/NPS

Kabotie captures petroglyphs with his digital camera.

Michael has lectured across America, in New Zealand, Germany and Switzerland. You can find his works in museums around the world, from the Heard Museum in Phoenix to the British Museum of Mankind in London, England, and the Gallery Calumet-Neuzzinger in Germany. Michael’s painting reflects his Hopi mentors, the pre-European Awatovi kiva mural painters and the Sikyatki pottery painters with a contemporary interpretation.

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petroglyphs

Did You Know?
In additon to the world class fossil record at Petrified Forest National Park, archeological resources are so abundant and so significant that they could stand alone within their own park!

Last Updated: October 23, 2006 at 14:48 MST