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Anita Fields : ウィキペディア英語版 | Anita Fields
Anita Fields (born 1951) is a Native American artist from the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Although her artistic career began later in her life, Fields is nationally recognized for her unique rendering of cultural items in clay. Fields specializes in ceramics, non-functional earthenware, and traditional Osage ribbon work. Some of the museums that have collected Fields' work include The Heard Museum, the Cowboy and Western Heritage Center, and the Museum of Art and Design. Her work has also been included in exhibitions such as the National Museum of the American Indian at the Smithsonian titled “Who Stole the Tepee,” and the “Legacy of the Generations: American Indian Women Potters” at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. ==Early life== Anita Fields was born in Hominy, OK, a member of both the Osage tribe and the Mvskoke Creek tribe. She grew up on her grandfather's allotment until she was around 8 years old, when her family moved to Colorado. Fields lived in Colorado until she was 18 years old. Her father was a guide and outfitter, as well as a welder, and her mother was a housewife. Fields' grandmother on her mother's side was a seamstress and taught Fields how to sew when she was a young girl. Fields enjoyed making clothes for her favorite doll and relished in these artistic outlets from an early age.〔 While at school in Colorado, Fields was taught how to make a fresco and a collage in the third grade. Her teacher at the time was passionate about the arts and influenced Fields' own love for art that would develop through time.〔
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