Rose Naranjo
| Rayuwa | |
|---|---|
| Haihuwa | 1915 |
| Mutuwa | 2004 |
| Ƴan uwa | |
| Yara |
view
|
| Sana'a | |
| Sana'a |
ceramicist (en) |
Rose " Gia " Naranjo ( Tewa : Aakonpovi ; 1917 - 16 ga Agusta, 2004) ta kasance mai tukwane da zane-zanen Tewa daga Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico . Ita ce uba ga iyalan Naranjo Puebloan na masu zane-zane, masu zane-zane da malamai. Tsohuwar mai wa'azin Southern Baptist, an sanya mata suna "Taska mai rai" ta birnin Santa Fe, New Mexico a 1994.
Tarihin Rayuwa
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]
Rayuwar farko da tukwane
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]An haifi Rose Naranjo a shekarar 1917 a Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico. Sunanta na Tewa, Aakonpovi yana nufin "furen Meadow". Kakarta, Lupita, [1] "Corn Tassel" wata mace mai magani kuma ungozoma ce ta rene ta bayan da iyayenta suka mutu a annobar mura ta Spain . Naranjo ta iya gano gadon aurenta ga Nampeyo, ɗaya daga cikin mawakan 'yan asalin Amurka na farko da aka sanya wa suna.
Naranjo ta fara koyon tukwanen gargajiya na Puebloan tun tana ƙarama. Ta yi tukunyar farko tana da shekaru 13 a gidan kakarta. [1] Naranjo, kamar yadda sauran masu tukwanen Tewa suka ɗauka, yumbu kyauta ce ta Uwar Duniya, tana godiya da kayan a matsayin yana da ikon kansa da kuma kasancewarsa. Ta bayyana yumbu a matsayin mai ƙarfi da hali, "yumbu yana da son kai sosai. Zai samar da kansa ga abin da yumbu yake so ya zama." [2] [3] Ta hanyar aiki da kayan, Naranjo ta yi iƙirarin cewa tukwanen da ke da "kyakkyawan niyya" zai iya ƙirƙirar ƙira waɗanda hangen nesa ne tsakanin nasa, da kuma ruhin tukwanen. Ƙirƙirar tukwanen ya zama tattaunawa tsakanin tukwanen da kayanta. [4] [5]
Tana da shekaru 18, ta auri mijinta, Michael Edward Naranjo, wani limamin cocin Southern Baptist . Tare suka ƙaura zuwa Taos don zama masu wa'azi, suna aiki a Taos da Santa Clara Pueblo. [1] [2] Tare, sun gudanar da aikin wa'azi a duk faɗin Kudu maso Yamma. Rose ta ci gaba da ƙera tukwane na gargajiya don tallafa wa iyalinta. Rose da Michael za su renon yara goma tare.

Manazarta
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Rose Naranjo - Page 2". sflivingtreasures.org. Retrieved 2025-01-21. Cite error: Invalid
<ref>tag; name ":1" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ Tessie Naranjo, “Those Naranjo Women: Daughters of the Earth,” in Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists, ed. Jill Ahlberg Yohe and Teri Greeves (Minneapolis: Minneapolis Institute of Art; Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2019), 76.