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Amelia Joe-Chandler,
Hogan Teapot, 2013. Hammered copper and cast silver. 7.5 x
11 x 9cm. National Museum of the American Indian, 26/9781.
Photo courtesy of the artist, Amelia Joe-Chandler.
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Nestled in an archival box in the storage vaults of the National
Museum of the American Indian, I encountered a small, copper sculpture
that points to an entirely different sense of place. Hogan
Teapot (2013) by Diné (Navajo) artist Amelia
Joe-Chandler is a living homage to the idea of homeparticularly
her familys home in Dinétah,
the ancestral homelands of the Navajo Nation in the American Southwest.
The brilliancy of the copper recalls the traditional form of the
hogan, a dome-shaped structure with a log or stone framework that
is traditionally covered with mud that hardens like rock. With a
door outlined in silver on the side, the lid handle as a stove pipe,
and a cast tree and two small sheep as the handle, Joe-Chandlers
sculpture changes the ubiquitous form of the teapot into a site
of personal encounter through these allusions to her familys
home.
Of the todichiinnii (Bitterwater) clan born for the
hast lish nii (Mud) clan, Joe-Chandler was introduced to
a range of art forms during her childhood. She learned the art of
sandpainting and silversmithing from both of her parents, who produced
works for local trading posts. At the age of nine, she wove a small
rug over a summer. Around the age of twelve, Joe-Chandler started
to work alongside her father, aiding in his jewelry production.
In the 1980s, she attended New Mexico State University in Las Cruces,
where she pursued a degree in arts education with a focus on metalsmithing.
Having been around jewelers her whole life, she already understood
how metals react: the challenges of sawing a straight line, how
and when to anneal silver, the very moment when solder flows. Her
metalsmithing professor, Kate Wagle, encouraged her to design pieces
on a larger scale with aluminum, experimenting with textures while
learning the art of hammer raising. She then pursued graduate work
at Indiana University-Bloomington, where she studied the traditional
techniques of Asian teapots under Professor Randy Long. According
to Long, Amelia Joe-Chandler is one [of my] most creative,
original, and dedicated metalsmithing and jewelry students
When I showed slides for inspiring students to make creative teapots
and I showed them some of my collection of Chinese Yixing clay teapots,
Amelia was inspired to make a hogan teapot.[1] Joe-Chandler
started to develop her hogan forms through sketches, mockups, and
plaster maquettes, carefully considering how to properly translate
her ideas into metal. This was not only a formal challenge, but
also a mode of fending off homesickness while away at school. In
Indiana, she was able to think deeply about her Navajo philosophy
outside of the sacred mountain range of Dinétah.
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Portrait of artist Amelia
Joe-Chandler. (Amelia Joe-Chandler)
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Joe-Chandlers work is informed by the Diné concept
of hózhó, the notion of internal and external
balance at the center of the Navajo Philosophy of Life. This philosophy
honors the connections between air, fire, water, and earth, which
Joe-Chandler meditates on while thinking through her designs. Earth
provides the metal, air feeds the fire to work the metal, and water
cleanses and cools it. Hózhó, or to walk in
beauty in Diné, expresses a notion of harmony and balance
between and among people, animals, and the environment.[2] Through
our conversations, Joe-Chandler taught me that life has both positive
and negative energies, and hozhó is a state where both are
in balance. Creating hozhó means you create when you
are a balanced human being, doing well, and are capable of putting
that balance into the piece. This is not just about designor
the perception of beauty in a finished artworkbut intimately
connected with the process of creating, including the process of
raising copper into the domed form through hammering. Every
artist puts something into their work: time, energy, sweat. Hammering
is a process that reflects your thoughts; your thinking process
about it. For Joe-Chandler, objects lock memories in timeboth
the spiritual and the cognitive. She taught me that even anger and
frustration can appear in a work if the artist is not in balance.
Part of the artistic and human process is working through emotions,
coming to an internal balance, and letting them go by selling or
giving away the artwork. Hozhó is not just at the heart of
the process; her Diné philosophy lives in the metal she has
worked.
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This comparison shows
two different iterations of hogan architecture in Dinétah.
On the left represents the traditional, conical form which
Joe-Chandler refers to in her Hogan Teapot, while the photographer
Toba Tucker captured a more contemporary form of the hexagonal
design plan. Left: Edward S. Curtis, Navaho Hogan, c. 1905.
From Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division,
Edward S. Curtis Collection. Right: Toba Tucker, View of Hogan,
1981. National Museum of the American Indian, NMAI.AC.030,
Item P28404.
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The Smithsonians Hogan Teapot is the very marriage
of form and utility. The copper color recalls the earth tones of
mud that characterize the round, traditional hogan form.[3] When
Joe-Chandler cites the structural form of the traditional hogan,
her reference provokes ideas beyond the visual. I asked about the
meaning of the hogan and Joe-Chandler immediately placed it not
in space but in time: it is the start of lifethe place where
one is born or a representation of the birthing processas
well as the end. It is not just a place that is made, but a place
where one can always be in the state of making or becoming.
This theme of becoming is also reflected in the utility of the
teapot itself, which can hold about one and a half cups of tea.
The very history of tea and teapots is part of the colonial American
origin story with the Boston Tea Party, the stories of the silversmith
Paul Revere, and remote or distant global networks of the tea
trade. Yet within the specific context of Dinétah, tea is
about knowing and honoring the local. Navajo tea is deeply rooted
in a sense of place and connection to the immediate land. Diné
herbalists and diagnosticians possess a deep knowledge of plant
life in the mountain desertoften dismissed as barren to the
foreign eyeand navigate the complex ecosystem of herbs for
healing. As knowledge under the care and collection of a medicine
man, one often drinks herbal tea for its healing qualities, from
the aching back to diabetes.[4] Special medicine hogans also operate
as sites of ceremony for the curing of the body as well as a site
of prayer. The hogan is not just a space of healing, but also a
place where community members can come together and recount histories
over a cup of tea or coffee.
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Amelia Joe-Chandler,
Hogan Teapot (detail of handle and spout), 2013. Photos courtesy
of the artist, Amelia Joe-Chandler.
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In the Smithsonians Hogan Teapot, two sheep are placed
beside a silver tree to form the teapots handle. When asked
about the importance of the sheep, Joe-Chandler mentioned that sheep
represent security and wellbeing for a family. Sheep provide food,
wool for a rug, or could be bartered in times of need. Even the
traditional weaving looms used by Diné women could be created
with any tree trunk. Introduced by Spanish settlers in North America,
sheep have been at the center of Diné life and art, from
the world-famous blankets spun from wool to a staple of the Southwestern
economy that allowed the Diné to trade among the Pueblos.
The need for grazing grounds operated at the center of the communitys
efforts to reclaim land after the Navajo Nations return from
the Long
Walk and internment by the U.S. Government at the Bosque Redondo
Reservation (1864-1868).[5] Sheep are central to Joe-Chandlers
family history. Her maternal great-grandfather was a medicine man,
and her grandmother was a midwife. Many gave her grandmother a lamb
after the birth of their children instead of money, because people
often had none. Silver was also gifted to medicine men in the form
of jewelry, adding a material meaning of wealth to the small figurines.
The female weavers on her fathers side of the family work
closely with sheep-herding families. Thus, the handle goes beyond
ornamentation, honoring the connections and dependencies between
people that have come to shape Joe-Chandlers personal story.
Art is not only a personal form of healing and remembrance, but
also Joe-Chandlers way to help others process their own memories.
Hogan Teapot provides a node of connection for others to work through
the memories of love, loss, and happiness that connect us to one
another across geography and time. Her teapots echo a deep commitment
to revealing connections between herself and land, the artist and
viewer, the server and guest, all of which speak to a fundamental
sense of humanity and the basic human experience.
This blogpost was based on a phone conversation between the
artist and writer on Saturday, September 5 and Saturday, September
26, 2020. Research for this piece was also supported by the Center
for Craft, Creativity, and Design in Asheville, North Carolina.
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