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Lillian Pitt

Lillian Pitt
Born 1944 (age 72–73)
Warm Springs Reservation, Oregon
Nationality American (Wasco, Yakama tribal heritage)
Education Mt. Hood Community College
Known for Mask Art, Ceramics, and Mixed Media
Notable work In museums: Adobe East, Summit, American Indian Contemporary Arts, Artique Gallery Ltd., Bailey Nelson Gallery, Buffalo Gallery, Images of the North, Quintana’s Gallery; Rattlesnale & Star, Scanlon Gallery, and Sunbird Gallery
Awards 1990 Governor’s Award for the Arts, Oregon; City of Oguni, Niigata Prefecture, Japan Gift to the City; Purchase Award, Oregon Percent for Arts, Metropolitan Arts Commission; Purchase Award, Washington State Arts Commission.
Website http://www.lillianpitt.com

Lillian Pitt (born 1944) is a Native American artist from the Columbia River region of the Pacific Northwest. Her Native American name is Wak’amu (camas root), chosen because it represents a "stubborn plant that won’t let go of the earth", referring to the long periods of time she spent wandering the hills during her childhood. Pitt is primarily known for her sculpting and mixed media artistry, which focuses on 12,000 years of Native American history and tradition of the Columbia River region.

Pitt was born and grew up on the Warm Springs Reservation in 1944 and later moved to Portland, Oregon in the early 1960s after graduating from Madras High School. Due to a back issue, she decided to take art classes at Mount Hood Community College and practice designing ceramic masks in 1981. Some of her early influences included the sculptor and painter R.C. Gorman of the Navajo tribe and Japanese mask making and ceramic traditions such as Raku and Anagama.

Lillian Pitt is also known for her iconography, in which she works to identify ancestral Columbia River petroglyphs in order to affirm the indigenous presence in the region. Pitt is skilled in reanimating ancient images illustrated on rocks. And in the 1990s, she began experimenting with several mediums, including precious metals to create jewelry, bronze masks, and sculptures. She has also collaborated with the Pendleton Woolen Mills to create blankets representing the Columbia River legends and petroglyphs.

In 2000, the Army Corps of Engineers commissioned her to create bronze plaques on petroglyph imagery for Columbia River tribal fishing sites, which were flooded by a dam. During the same year, she was awarded a fellowship from Portland’s Interstate Firehouse Cultural Center to create large-scale bronze sculptures. She had also started several public arts projects in the early 2000s, in collaboration with artists such as Rick Bartow of the Wiyot tribe, Gail Tremblay of the Onondaga/Miqmak tribe, and Elizabeth Woody of the Navajo/Warm Springs tribe, who is also her niece.


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