Female Figures and Paintings from the Land of Enchantment

Guest Artist

Diné Painter, Armond Antonio, Questions the Nature of Reality. Words: Jada Griffin

Diné Painter, Armond Antonio, Questions the Nature of Reality.

Words: Jada Griffin

This land of enchantment speaks of another time sense than that of our Western European lineal time. Here in New Mexico, we are aware of the bare geological bones of the earth. Where other American cities are paved, in less developed towns like Taos and Santa Fe, roads are often dirt. The dirt connects us literally and directly to the skin of the planet on which we live, carrying us back to the origin birth that was the creation of the world. Armond Antonio, a young Diné painter from Pueblo Pintado on the Navajo reservation that spans New Mexico, Arizona and Utah, well understands this expansive and stratified sense of time. The very mesas and canyons of his homeland are saturated with a palpable spiritual force - a spiritual force that includes the multiple layers of reality that have been absorbed into the myths and stories of his people.

Southwest Art, Armond Antonio’s most recent work, is an extraordinary painting. Perhaps more than even the painter knows. When viewing it up close, its large proportions, (four by five feet), pulsate with mysterious energy. Artists often operate intuitively, hitching themselves by instinct to a sky hook, a tool that has the potential to catalyze a breakthrough in their work. This has happened to me in my own art. Suddenly and without explanation, it will occur to the artist to incorporate a new element into a painting, and this element all-at-once changes the emotional impact of the entire piece. Arriving at the experience demands a “letting go,” a surrender of preconceptions, of one’s perceived ability to control the progress of the painting. This “allowing” permits one to enter into the rhythm of a vaster and entirely inter-connected universe. The blissful condition is trance-like. It has more power to affect the artist than the artist has power to stop it. A painting seems to arrive out of silence, emerging without the hand of the painter.

When Armond Antonio includes into the foreground of Southwest Art an acrylic paint tube with yellow paint oozing out of it, a sudden breakthrough is recognized in his art. The paint tube, a surreal addition, causes a juxtaposition of unexpected elements. We respond convulsively to the beauty in front of us, and we know too that the painting is an invention created in the mind of the artist. The painting is not the real world. Beyond this, however, what Antonio effectively does in Southwest Art, with its Anasazi ruins in the background, its Indigenous pottery and Diné storyteller in the middle ground, and its paint tube in the foreground, is question the very nature of reality. The artist makes it clear that the addition of the paint tube was a means to communicate to other Navajo artists accustomed to working exclusively with natural materials, that they can expand both their repertoire as well as their horizons by using industrially manufactured paint. But in this masterful canvas, we travel forward in time from the back of the painting where the Anasazi ruins are, to the front of the painting where the paint tube is. (The paint tube, we know innately, rests in contemporary time.) When we walk on the bare earth of the dirt roads of New Mexico, we mimic in reverse what happens in the painting and travel back in time to the very origins of our planet. Within the realm of Antonio’s painting, as on the roads of New Mexico, we are time travelers from one energetic field to another energetic field. Present time is one reality. Past time is another. The kingdom of the painting is one reality. The territory of the “real world” is a different one. The painting, in fact, jogs us into an alternative reality, a reality where the thrust and forces of a vaster, interconnected cosmic fabric take over our fragile human capabilities. 

Antonio’s universe is a universe of mystery that probes the unknown. If a painting can be its own reality, then there can be many other kinds of reality. Southwest Art depicts, not the world that we see, but one that the artist can claim is really there, a world that exists in a different dimension of time than the occidental consecutive one we are used to. The beauty of Armond Antonio’s painting goes beyond the ordinary limits of human consciousness into one that forms the foundation of experience, the ground of being.

Read the complete Navajo Times article HERE

Southwest Art by Armond Antonio. Oil on canvas, 4’ x 5’ (unfinished). Inquiries, email SOUL

Southwest Art by Armond Antonio. Oil on canvas, 4’ x 5’ (unfinished). Inquiries, email SOUL

Shaman by Armond Antonio. Pencil and colored pencil on paper. Inquiries, email SOUL“I was trying to make this piece stick out from the background - for the figure to appear as if in between what is real and what is unknown. Like a portal.” Armond An…

Shaman by Armond Antonio. Pencil and colored pencil on paper. Inquiries, email SOUL

“I was trying to make this piece stick out from the background - for the figure to appear as if in between what is real and what is unknown. Like a portal.” Armond Antonio

Janice Griffin