User:Tillman/Virgil Ortiz

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Virgil Ortiz (born 1969, Cochiti Pueblo) is a Pueblo artist, potter,  fashion designer and photographer from Cochiti Pueblo in northern New Mexico. Ortiz makes traditional Cochiti figurative pottery, experimental figurative pottery, traditional pottery vessels, and designer clothing.

Virgil's mother, noted potter Seferina Ortiz (1931-2007), taught her son to make traditional Cochiti pueblo pottery. “The thought has never crossed my mind to be anything other than an artist and fashion designer. Art is in my blood,” he said.

Virgil won his first Santa Fe Indian Market award at the age of 14. “I grew up participating in Indian Market, it was always an exciting time for my family,” says Ortiz.

By age 16, Virgil Ortiz was a successful, working artist and he began to travel. “I would have a show, sell pottery and save,” she said in an interview. “With the money saved I would take a friend and we would travel to different cities -- New York, Chicago, Los Angeles -- and I got to experience different cultures.” Virgil was drawn to the night club scene. There he saw many people with tattoos and piercings that reminded him of the 1800s Cochiti figures. “I was inspired to create images of what I saw, it gave me a freedom knowing that I was not an innovator or even going outside of tradition, I was in fact a Revivalist,” he said.

For a 2003 collaboration with designer Donna Karan, he developed boldly patterned textiles based on his hypergraphic decorative painting. Three years later he established Indigene, his own fashion line.

Ortiz was selected to be a United States Artists Target Fellow in 2007, in Crafts and Traditional Arts. Ortiz continues (2013) to live and work in Cochiti Pueblo.

Ortiz's works are in the collections of the National Museum of the American Indian, the Stedelijk Museum in The Netherlands,   the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture, and others.

Traditional Cochiti pottery figurines
During the early days of the transcontinental railroad, Cochiti artists caricatured the travelers—circus performers, salesmen, and adventurers— who suddenly appeared in their world. “The figurative style was a form of social commentary,” Ortiz said. “They captured in clay the images of all the crazy, nonnative people who were passing through the area at that time. Those crazier pieces and the tradition of pottery as social commentary really leave the board wide open for me as an artist.” Ortiz and other Cochiti potters have revived this tradition for the 21st century.

Around 1984, Bob Gallegos, an Albuquerque collector, showed the young Ortiz his collection of 1800’s Cochiti pottery. Ortiz could not believe how similar the 1800 pottery was to his own work, as he had never seen these pieces before.

Ortiz is probably best known for his edgy pottery figures, his contemporary take on the traditional Cochiti pottery figures from the late 1800s.