Artist
Biography/Statement
An accomplished and highly recognized
artist for more than twenty-five years, Lillian Pitt combines
indigenous and
contemporary motifs
in her sculptures, masks, wearable art, and works on paper.
Her work has been exhibited and reviewed nationally and internationally.
She was the recipient of the Governor's Award of the Oregon
Arts Commission in 1990, which declared that she had made, "significant
contributions to the growth and development of the cultural
life of Oregon.” In the first decade of the new millennium,
Lillian extended her work into public spaces and parks as
she and a team of Native American artists were commissioned
by
the city of Portland, the Oregon Convention Center, Portland
State University, and a variety of other cultural institutions
to create a series of public art pieces.
Lillian has been honored by a continuing artistic connection
with Portland State University. Since 2000, the school has commissioned
her to create several important public art projects, especially
those with their Native American Student and Community Center.
Her public art for PSU includes two rooftop sculptures and a
fifty-foot totem pole that celebrates and allegorizes the journey
of salmon in the Columbia Gorge from birth to their journey to
the sea, to their home to spawn.
Beyond her contributions to the
cultural vitality of the PSU campus, Pitt brings a wealth of
knowledge to the
educational
life of the university and the city. In describing the source
of her imagery, Lillian says “I use the ancient stories
of my ancestors as a basis for the imagery I create. By doing
this I maintain the memory of an ancient culture and keep
the beliefs of my people alive. We have forgotten how to
live in
harmony with nature. Accessing this vast reservoir of traditional
information and translating it into contemporary terms jogs
our memories and provides points of reference to achieving
balance
within ourselves, our community and the world.”
Lillian describes herself as having
been a stubborn child who developed an early fascination with
the skills and stories
of female elders. After a career as a hairdresser and beauty
school
instructor, Lillian went to community college to study ceramics.
In her early thirties, she began to make clay masks inspired
by female forms. “Having the tie with the earth, and
then feeling and touching the earth, which is clay, was one
of the
first major passions that I've had about art work.”
The authority and wisdom of indigenous
women powerfully animate the work of Lillian Pitt. Her series
of masks represent
the heroic elements of women’s lives, and the position
of women as the bearers and preservers of culture. The
Spider Woman mask
honors the women who create and preserve the household,
holding kinship ties together. But Pitt notes that many
of her female
masks invoke the spirit of the feminine in various spheres. “There
is "Feather Woman" which she has an abstract
eagle feather on her forehead which represents all women
who are our
teachers.” Pitt tells stories of women chiefs in
her tribal traditions, and preserves these stories through
other
female
images in the mask series, such as the Hawk Woman, and
the Bird Woman, Coyote Woman, and Wolf Woman.
Lillian is part of the Warm Springs/Wasco
and Yakama tribes of the Columbia River Gorge in the Pacific
Northwest.
Her work draws
on the dramatic landscape of the Columbia River Gorge
and the scientific and cultural knowledge of Native peoples.
Her early
artistic vision grew from the discovery in 1960 of “She
Who Watches,” a petroglyph created by indigenous
tribes that remains as a sentient presence—a stone
perched above the mighty Columbia River to this day.
As Lillian explains, “She
Who Watches has become a signature piece for my career,
is a source of personal inspiration as the original overlooked
my
great grandmother's village N’xluidix, and is a
recurring image of significance for the middle Columbia
River Chinookan
peoples of which I am a descent. She is a charismatic
figure, as well as a heroine of antiquity.”
Lillian offers the following story
of the origins of her ancestors who settled thousands of years
ago in
the Columbia
River Gorge: