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Sunday, 03 June 2007 |
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Sculptor, 1951-1998
Marsha Gomez, an Indigenous woman of Choctaw and Mexican-American descent, was born in New Orleans in 1951. She grew up in Arkansas where she learned Native American Pottery techniques. After earning a degree in art education, she moved to Austin in 1982 and immediately plunged into community service. Marsha used art to explore her heritage and create social change. Convinced that creativity lies within every person, she was a popular artist-in-residence in Austin schools and taught art to seniors in community centers. She co-founded the Indigenous Women's Network and Director of the Alma de Mujer Center for Social Change.
Marsha created pottery in the style of women artists from Oaxaca and New Mexico. She is best known for her sculpture "Madre del Mundo," an indigenous woman gazing contemplatively at a globe cradled in her lap. The work was commissioned for a Mother's Day peace protest at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site. Federal agents confiscated the statue but later returned it, and Marsha placed it atop a knoll at Alma de Mujer. More commissions followed. She produced a second Madre del Mundo for the Peace Farm in the Texas Panhandle, across the road from the Pantex nuclear weapons plant. She made a third for Casa de Colores, an indigenous resource center and cooperative farm in Brownsville.
Marsha was also a herbalist and enjoyed working in the organic garden at Alma. She developed a great deal of expertise over the years and used the medicines from the garden to create many healing medicines.
Marsha died an untimely death at a young age in 1998 at the hands of her son who had a mental illness and had no idea what he was doing. The entire community mourned the loss of Marsha as did all who knew her.
Marsha's Quotation
The energy and spirit that go into my work result in a unique expression of respect and reverence for women, the Earth, and indigenous way of life.
Working with clay as my dear companion for the past fifteen years, I have come closer each year to a deeper union with the Earth and closer to an appreciation of how all the elements in the universe work together. In turn, I myself have become a vessel to the vessels that are created through my heart and hands.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 25 October 2011 )
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