Penguin
Koala
Snake
Black, Gray and Tan Pig
Black and White Pig
Untiltled pen drawing on cardboard
Drawing
Felipe Archuleta makes his sculptures out of wood and other materials he finds himself or obtains from his neighbors.
He uses carpenter’s tools to fashion the various parts of each work, and nails and glue to assemble them. He smoothes the joins with a mixture of sawdust and glue, which also builds up the surfaces.
Archuleta’s first sculptures depicted those animals he knew best—sheep, rabbits, burros, and cats. He soon began to make larger, sometimes life-size, animal sculptures, expanding his repertoire to include giraffes, elephants, monkeys, and others based on pictures he found in children’s books and natural history magazines. Archuleta generally emphasizes the ferocious nature of the animals he portrays by providing them with irregularly carved teeth, wide-eyed stares, and exaggerated snouts and genitals.
Felipe Archuleta, who has spent most of his life in Tesuque, New Mexico, worked as a carpenter for over thirty years. In 1967, unable to find work, he prayed to God to alleviate his poverty and desperation. His subsequent religious awakening led to his work as a carver of animals, for which he has been justly celebrated.
Hispanic-American Art (brochure, Washington, D.C.: National Museum of American Art)
Luce Artist Quote
“You know, too much work to satisfy too many people. They only want me. They say. ‘Felipe, you make the best.'” Felipe Archuleta, quoted in Davis Mather, “Felipe Archuleta Folk Artist,” The Clarion, Summer 1977*
*Article for Smithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery
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