Thursday, April 5, 2012

Spirit Talk - The Life and Work of Woody CRUMBO

Spirit Talk - The Life and Work of Woody CRUMBO .... took approximately three years to complete. The interviews, video and still location shots and research took place within the larger context of silversmithing instruction, writing and the natural interest and responsibilities of life.

During that time I met many interesting persons and received opportunities to exhibit our father,
Woody Crumbo's, depictions and interpretation of native American ceremony and regalia, and wild life.

2012 is the Centennial Year of Woody Crumbo. This has given rise to many honoring and commemorating exhibitions, chief among them being the Oklahoma History Center, OKC, OKHistory.org and the Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, OK (spring 2013), GILCREASE.UTULSA.EDU.

The work on the documentary, Spirit Talk, is largely in support of this interest for Woody Crumbo, who was a great talker on many subjects but remained a very private person. The documentary allows Woody to tell his own story through the recovery of archived video and audio taped interviews.

The Gilcrease Museum graciously allowed me white glove access to their extensive collection of CRUMBO works on paper and canvas, photographed and digitized the work and made their photo files available. Their collection allows the public to view many previously unseen early works painted by CRUMBO.

The doc project has taken me broader and deeper into our  CRUMBO family life as well as my own. Woody Crumbo's grandson Woody Carter provided original compositions for the sound track.www.woody-Carter.com

Spirit Talk will be screened at the 2012 Flint Hills Wisdom Keepers Gathering. 

1 comment:

  1. Excerpt from the Flint Hills Wisdom Keepers Gathering website (fhwisdomkeepers.org) about the film mentioned above:

    Artistic Connections to Mother Earth and Father Sky

    We are blessed for the opportunity to feature the film The Spirit Talk of…Woody Crumbo made by one of our honored guests of 2012, Minisa Crumbo Halsey. In the 50-minute documentary, Minisa pays loving tribute to the life and art of her father, renowned Citizen Potawatomi artist Woody Crumbo. Through Woody’s artistic legacy, we are inspired by the playful and rhythmic dance of nature and the prayerful and solemn ceremony of his people, as seen through his keen eye and captured in his “spirit” work. As we contemplate the powerful images this film is certain to evoke, Minisa reminds us that: "Life is about finding the fluid line that connects Spirit with form and beyond to visible and audible expression. Spirit behind expression and the continuity of identity occurs on the level of Spirit, not on the level of form. May we all experience that connection in our lives…"

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