Vash Gon - Jicarella (Framed Prints)
Vash Gon – Jicarella
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 7.17mb, 5726 x 7894 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (September 2019)
Source Material: Original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, titled “Vash Gon – Jicarella”, c. 1905.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
Vash Gon – Jicarella
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 7.17mb, 5726 x 7894 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (September 2019)
Source Material: Original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, titled “Vash Gon – Jicarella”, c. 1905.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
Vash Gon – Jicarella
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 7.17mb, 5726 x 7894 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (September 2019)
Source Material: Original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, titled “Vash Gon – Jicarella”, c. 1905.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
Jicarilla Apache (Spanish: [xikaˈɾiʝa], Jicarilla language: Jicarilla Dindéi), one of several loosely organized autonomous bands of the Eastern Apache, refers to the members of the Jicarilla Apache Nation currently living in New Mexico and speaking a Southern Athabaskan language. The term Jicarilla comes from Mexican Spanish meaning "little basket", referring to the small sealed baskets they used as drinking vessels. To neighboring Apache bands, such as the Mescalero and Lipan, they were known as Kinya-Inde ("People who live in fixed houses").
The Jicarilla Apache are a federally recognized tribal entity that, in 1937, organized a formal government and adopted a constitution. Traditional tribal leaders were elected as their first tribal council members. In 2000, the tribe officially changed their name to the Jicarilla Apache Nation.
The Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation, at 36°33′16″N 107°04′26″W, is located within two northern New Mexico counties:
Rio Arriba County
Sandoval County.
from the Colorado border south to Cuba, New Mexico. The reservation sits along U.S. Route 64 and N.M. 537. In 2022, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that the reservation has a land area of 1,316.1 sq mi (3525,232 km2) and had a population of 2,596. The southern half of the reservation is open plains and the northern portion resides in the treed Rocky Mountains. Mammals and birds migratory paths cross the reservation seasonally, including mountain lion, black bear, elk, Canada geese, and turkey. Rainbow, brown and cutthroat trout are stocked in seven lakes on the reservation, but annual conditions such as low precipitation result in high pH-levels. From 1995 to 2000, the lake levels were severely low due to drought. As a result, most of the fish were killed off during those years. The reservation sits on the San Juan Basin, which is rich in fossil fuels. The basin is the largest producer of oil along the Rocky Mountains and the second largest producer of natural gas in the United States.
Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jicarilla_Apache&oldid=1240026147
Jicarilla Apache Nation website (https://janofficial.com/)