Alvin Eli Amason
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Alvin Eli Amason (born 1948) is a Sugpiaq Alaskan painter and sculptor. He was born in Kodiak and is of Alutiiq ancestry. He received his Master of Fine Arts from Arizona State University and taught at Navajo Community College. He now teaches at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and is the head of the Alaska Native Art studies program there. He is a member of the Alaska Native Arts Foundation Board of Directors.[1]
Amason was raised by his grandfather, a bear guide. He considered other careers, including engineering, before becoming an artist and sculptor. In 1973, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Central Washington University and received a Master of Fine Arts degree from Arizona State University in 1976.
After graduation, he painted and taught art in the American Southwest. He was the chair of Navajo Community College's Art Department from 1976 to 1978. In 1978, he took a position as a lecturer at University of Great Falls in Montana. He was appointed by the governor to the Alaska State Council on the Arts in 1981. He received a position at the University of Alaska in 1984, and the Visual Arts Center of Alaska in 1989. In 1992 he took a position as director of the Native Art Center of the University of Alaska in Fairbanks, Alaska. Amason has created paintings for Anchorage International Airport and the U.S. Federal Courthouse Building in Anchorage, as well as public schools in Alaska.
Amason's work has been in invitational shows in Alaska, Arizona, Michigan, Montana, Oklahoma, and Washington, DC, and his works are in the Nordjyllands Kunstmuseum in Denmark, the University of Alaska Museum of the North, the Alaska State Museum, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Heard Museum.[2]
[edit] References
[edit] External links used as sources
- Arctic Circle's Museum of Art, Photography, and Anthropology
- Alaska Native Arts Foundation
- "Alvin Amason." St. James Guide to Native North American Artists. St. James Press, 1998. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008.
- University of Alaska Native Arts Program