Artist

Romando Vigil

born San Ildefonso, NM 1902-died San Bernardino, CA 1978
Also known as
  • Tse Ye Mu
  • Falling in Water
Born
San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico, United States
Died
San Bernardino, California, United States
Biography

Like several other Pueblo painters, Tse Ye Mu (also called Romando Vigil, of San Ildefonso Pueblo) was included in the first major exhibition of American Indian art to be seen across the United States. The "Exhibition of Indian Tribal Arts," curated by the artist John Sloan, opened in New York in 1931 and contained six hundred works of art from twenty-one tribes. Tse Ye Mu received a commission to paint a mural for the opening of the exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 1933. The artist was also employed, probably as an animation artist, by the Walt Disney studios in Hollywood, California, for a short period in the 1950s.

Andrew Connors Pueblo Indian Watercolors: Learning by Looking, A Study Guide (Washington, D.C.: National Museum of American Art, 1993).

Works by this artist (24 items)

Edward Kemeys, Buffalo and Wolves, 1876, bronze, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of J. Willis Johnson, 1984.141.2
Buffalo and Wolves
Date1876
bronze
On view
Edward Kemeys, Grizzly Bear at Bay, 1871-1885, painted plaster, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1895.10.3
Grizzly Bear at Bay
Date1871-1885
painted plaster
On view
Edward Kemeys, Prairie Chicken, ca. 1870s, bronze, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Charlotte J. Patterson and Herbert L. Patterson in memory of Elizabeth Z. Patterson, 2002.78
Prairie Chicken
Dateca. 1870s
bronze
Not on view
Edward Kemeys, Lion, ca. 1893, bronze, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of J. Willis Johnson, 1984.141.5
Lion
Dateca. 1893
bronze
Not on view