• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
MENUMENU
MENUMENU
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • FlaglerLive Board of Directors
    • Comment Policy
    • Mission Statement
    • Our Values
    • Privacy Policy
  • Live Calendar
  • Submit Obituary
  • Submit an Event
  • Support FlaglerLive
  • Advertise on FlaglerLive (386) 503-3808
  • Search Results

FlaglerLive

No Bull, no Fluff, No Smudges

MENUMENU
  • Flagler
    • Flagler County Commission
    • Beverly Beach
    • Economic Development Council
    • Flagler History
    • Mondex/Daytona North
    • The Hammock
    • Tourist Development Council
  • Palm Coast
    • Palm Coast City Council
    • Palm Coast Crime
  • Bunnell
    • Bunnell City Commission
    • Bunnell Crime
  • Flagler Beach
    • Flagler Beach City Commission
    • Flagler Beach Crime
  • Cops/Courts
    • Circuit & County Court
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • Federal Courts
    • Flagler 911
    • Fire House
    • Flagler County Sheriff
    • Flagler Jail Bookings
    • Traffic Accidents
  • Rights & Liberties
    • Fourth Amendment
    • First Amendment
    • Privacy
    • Second Amendment
    • Seventh Amendment
    • Sixth Amendment
    • Sunshine Law
    • Third Amendment
    • Religion & Beliefs
    • Human Rights
    • Immigration
    • Labor Rights
    • 14th Amendment
    • Civil Rights
  • Schools
    • Adult Education
    • Belle Terre Elementary
    • Buddy Taylor Middle
    • Bunnell Elementary
    • Charter Schools
    • Daytona State College
    • Flagler County School Board
    • Flagler Palm Coast High School
    • Higher Education
    • Imagine School
    • Indian Trails Middle
    • Matanzas High School
    • Old Kings Elementary
    • Rymfire Elementary
    • Stetson University
    • Wadsworth Elementary
    • University of Florida/Florida State
  • Economy
    • Jobs & Unemployment
    • Business & Economy
    • Development & Sprawl
    • Leisure & Tourism
    • Local Business
    • Local Media
    • Real Estate & Development
    • Taxes
  • Commentary
    • The Conversation
    • Pierre Tristam
    • Diane Roberts
    • Guest Columns
    • Byblos
    • Editor's Blog
  • Culture
    • African American Cultural Society
    • Arts in Palm Coast & Flagler
    • Books
    • City Repertory Theatre
    • Flagler Auditorium
    • Flagler Playhouse
    • Flagler Youth Orchestra
    • Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra
    • Palm Coast Arts Foundation
    • Special Events
  • Elections 2024
    • Amendments and Referendums
    • Presidential Election
    • Campaign Finance
    • City Elections
    • Congressional
    • Constitutionals
    • Courts
    • Governor
    • Polls
    • Voting Rights
  • Florida
    • Federal Politics
    • Florida History
    • Florida Legislature
    • Florida Legislature
    • Ron DeSantis
  • Health & Society
    • Flagler County Health Department
    • Ask the Doctor Column
    • Health Care
    • Health Care Business
    • Covid-19
    • Children and Families
    • Medicaid and Medicare
    • Mental Health
    • Poverty
    • Violence
  • All Else
    • Daily Briefing
    • Americana
    • Obituaries
    • News Briefs
    • Weather and Climate
    • Wildlife

Resurgence: Georgia O’Keeffe, Chief Two Moons and a Jewish-Native American Connection

January 20, 2017 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

'Resurgence: Southwest Native Americans in Literature & Art,' a Jan. 20-21 event in Flagler Beach, will explore the work of an Ormond Beach artist haunted by Georgia O’Keeffe, Chief Two Moons and a Jewish-Native American Connection.
‘Resurgence: Southwest Native Americans in Literature & Art,’ a Jan. 20-21 event in Flagler Beach, will explore the work of an Ormond Beach artist haunted by Georgia O’Keeffe, Chief Two Moons and a Jewish-Native American Connection. Above, ‘Two Moons,’ by Rachel Thompson.

When artist Georgia O’Keeffe was living in northern New Mexico in the 1940s, she’d look out from her home – dubbed Ghost Ranch – and be spellbound by Pedernal Mountain, a nearby flat-topped mesa almost 10,000 feet high.


“God told me if I painted it enough, I could have it,” O’Keeffe famously said. And so she did, casting Pedernal onto her canvases almost 30 times before her death in 1986.

Inspired by a chance encounter with a Cherokee prophet, Ormond Beach artist Rachel Thompson felt a similar mystical calling: to paint the faces of Native Americans, to paint what the Black Feet tribe called “Spirit Dogs” (horses), and to paint the Indian-rich landscape of the American Southwest (including O’Keeffe’s Pedernal).

And Thompson felt compelled to explore the connections she began sensing between her Jewish spiritual path and her Native American calling.

“Resurgence: Southwest Native Americans in Literature & Art,” a two-day event at Ocean Art Gallery in Flagler Beach, will feature an exhibit of Thompson’s Native American and Southwest paintings, and she’ll discuss her art at a reception from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday Jan. 20.

The reception will feature a performance by Rick de Yampert on Native American flutes, as well as recorded music by Dine’ (Navajo) chant singer Louie Gonnie, Native American flute player R. Carlos Nakai, and powwow drumming.

Mystery novelist and Tony Hillerman protégé Susan Slater, who moved to Palm Coast after living for 39 years west of Taos — within sighting distance of O’Keeffe’s Pedernal – will speak on “The Resurgence of American Indians in Popular Literature” at 1 p.m. Saturday Jan. 21 at Ocean Art Gallery. Slater, whose mysteries feature the Pueblo people of New Mexico, also will be signing her books at the Friday Jan. 20 reception.

Before Thompson returned to Florida several years ago, she was running an art boutique in western New York where, she says, “There’s a lot of Native American history.”

“I had some wind chimes out (at the boutique) and this Cherokee guy came in,” Thompson says. “He started prophesying to me, talking about my life. He said, ‘The wind from the chimes brought me in.’ He said, ‘You have Cherokee in you. It’s in your eyes.’ I’ve had two people tell me that, but I have no proof of that.”

And so Thompson’s artistic path was rejuvenated in a surprising way: She felt called to paint Native American portraits, often working from the evocative photographs taken by the renowned Edward Curtis in the early 1900s.

And Thompson’s newfound art path coincided roughly with her burgeoning, newfound spiritual path: Raised in a Christian household while growing up in Virginia and later Jacksonville, she was feeling called to follow Judaism, a spirituality she pursued long before officially converting in 2006. That was evidenced in 2000 when she took a new name – Rachel, after the favorite wife of the Biblical patriarch Jacob.

“My journey is like that of Abraham,” Thompson says. “I came out of one spirit path and into another path.”

Last year found Thompson, who was named the Gargiulo Art Foundation’s 2015 Flagler County Artist of the Year, literally walking the walk of both her Jewish and Native American paths. In April 2016, she sojourned in Israel for the umpteenth time, spending time in solitary retreat beside the Dead Sea while her painting “Mourning into Dancing” was on display as part of an Israeli-American joint exhibition in Hadera.

In October 2016, Thompson, visited northern New Mexico for the second time. There she traveled in the shadow of Pedernal and explored the ancient ruins of the Anasazi pueblo people at a site known as Tsankawi, which is part of Bandelier National Monument. Tucked in the Jemez Mountains between Los Alamos and Santa Fe, the cliff dwellings of Tsankawi date to the late 1100s.

“That was a divinely ordained trip,” Thompson says of her New Mexico visit. “I know I was on sacred ground and do feel I needed to walk that land, to reconnect with that land. I know I was ordained to go back there just as much as I was ordained to go to Israel this year. But I haven’t perceived the reality of what transpired. I still haven’t gotten to the bottom of this tribal connection, but there are many people in this area that have that Jewish-Native American common interest and have been drawn to both places. I don’t have the answers – I know there is one, but I don’t have it.”

Thompson explored that connection in her triptych painting “Tribal Ties: East Meets West” (which is not in her current exhibit at Ocean Art Gallery). The work depicts a galloping horse at left, a wave on the right with a string drooping from its middle, and a feminine figure in between – with a shock of actual horse hair coming out of her belly button.

“That was a totally spiritual thing that I ended up with the horse hair coming out of the belly button and the tzitzi (Jewish prayer strings) coming out of the wave,” Thompson said.

Scholar Larry J. Zimmerman, in his book “The Sacred Wisdom of the Native Americans,” writes that “when the Blackfeet of the northern plains first saw a horse, they thought it was like a dog, except larger and swifter. The Blackfeet thought of it as a wondrous gift from the spirits and decided Old Man, the creator, must have sent the creature from the sky as a gift. The Blackfeet called the horse ‘Spirit Dog’ or ‘Medicine Dog.’ ”

Thompson’s exhibition at Ocean Art Gallery includes paintings of “Spirit Dogs,” two paintings of Pedernal (her most recent works) and a number of Native American portraits, including two historically prominent chiefs: Two Moons and Joseph.

“It’s almost therapeutic for me to paint a Native face,” Thompson said. “I paint it until I feel that face is looking back at me, telling me that I’ve honored it.”

Two Moons (1847–1917) was one of the Cheyenne chiefs who fought against Custer in the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

Joseph, of the Nez Perce tribe, was born in 1840 in the Oregon territory and given the name Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt (which translates to Thunder Rolling Down a Mountain). He became known as Joseph – the name his father took after converting to Christianity.

After assuming the leadership of a band of the Nez Perce in 1871, Chief Joseph and other tribal leaders balked at a U.S. government plan to move their people to a reservation. In 1877, the Nez Perce embarked on a 1,400-mile march to find sanctuary in Canada, but they surrendered to pursuing U.S. military forces in the fall of that year.

In was then that Chief Joseph delivered his famous speech that concluded: “Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired. My heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.” Until his death in 1904, he would never see his homeland again.

“Two Moons had a countenance that transcends the immediate and he has the countenance of a visionary,” Thompson says. “And his countenance was not broken, like some of the Native people you see. Chief Joseph always looks really sad.

“But there was something in Two Moons beyond the immediate of what he experienced. He wasn’t broken down. That dignity, that long-term vison – he saw something positive down the road. I take heart in that. When I look at him, it lifts me up. I enjoy having him around.”

–Rick de Yampert

“Resurgence: Southwest Native Americans in Literature & Art” is a two-day event at Ocean Art Gallery, 206 Moody Blvd. (S.R. 100), Flagler Beach, Florida. The Native American paintings of Rachel Thompson will be on display and the artist will give a talk during a reception from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday Jan. 20.

Mystery novelist Susan Slater will speak on “The Resurgence of American Indians in Popular Literature” and hold a Q&A at 1 p.m. Saturday Jan. 21 at the gallery. She also will be signing her books at the Friday Jan. 20 reception.

Tickets for the reception are available only at eventbrite.com for $25, which includes admission to Saturday’s talk/Q&A event. Tickets for Saturday’s event only can be purchased on eventbrite.com, at Ocean Art Gallery during open hours, or at the door day of the event for $15. For more information call the gallery at 386-693-4882 or go online at flagleroceanartgallery.com.

Support FlaglerLive's End of Year Fundraiser
Thank you readers for getting us to--and past--our year-end fund-raising goal yet again. It’s a bracing way to mark our 15th year at FlaglerLive. Our donors are just a fraction of the 25,000 readers who seek us out for the best-reported, most timely, trustworthy, and independent local news site anywhere, without paywall. FlaglerLive is free. Fighting misinformation and keeping democracy in the sunshine 365/7/24 isn’t free. Take a brief moment, become a champion of fearless, enlightening journalism. Any amount helps. We’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit news organization. Donations are tax deductible.  
You may donate openly or anonymously.
We like Zeffy (no fees), but if you prefer to use PayPal, click here.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Anonymous says

    January 20, 2017 at 1:12 pm

    Oh,what a letdown, I thought I was going to get a chance to SEE an actual Georgia O’s painting .:(

  2. Anonymous says

    January 20, 2017 at 1:50 pm

    Rachel is a brilliant artist and everyone should experience her work.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  • Conner Bosch law attorneys lawyers offices palm coast flagler county
  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Primary Sidebar

  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Recent Comments

  • Using Common Sense on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Billy B on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Marlee on NOAA Cuts Are Putting Our Coastal Communities At Risk
  • James on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • D. on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Enough on Florida Republicans Devour Their Own
  • Alice on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Big Mike on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Justbob on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025
  • Lance Carroll on Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents
  • Lance Carroll on Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents
  • Ray W, on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025
  • CJ on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Ray W, on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025

Log in