Excerpts from 'Spirit Talk': It is from the unified and receptive language interaction of
our mind, heart, body, and spirit languages that we are able to communicate with
the realities and even messages from denizens of the natural world – refreshing
and newly emerging spirit beings in the forms of plants, animals, the
Grandmother Moon and Star Beings, the Wind, Fire, and Water Beings, and even
the heartbeat of Mother Earth, the pulses of Father Sky-Sun, and the mind of
the Prime Creator, the Master of All Breath …
The Medicine Wheel 4 X 4 wagon is
building its wheels. The finely meshed and recognized gears of language that
carry our loads, provide a center and direction, are beginning to be
directionally and seasonally purposed to function as an inclusive true home and
spiritual sanctuary. The home is under final construction and livable … always
a dance and a song in the process of becoming
at spring, or any given time. Welcome
home traveler and seeker …
Spring
Equinox: The east-west arm of balance is the ‘hard road of life’. The
east-west axis provides the essential cross balance with the north-south cross
balance – spinal axis of harmony – the Good Red Road … This mental spring arm
extends forward and out from the center, joining with the introspective,
medicine autumn arm of the autumnal equinox. The Medicine Wheel is in an active
and visible building process.
Crumbo was born in Lexington, Oklahoma, the son of an Indian mother and a French father. He attended government schools as a child and showed such promise that he received a scholarship to the American Indian Institute in Wichita for his last two years of high school. While at the Institute, he became interested in expressing Indian tradition and culture through his art. After three years at the University of Wichita he transferred to the University of Oklahoma where he studied with Oscar B. Jacobson. At the early age of 21, Crumbo was appointed Director of Indian Art at Bacone College, the only institute of higher learning exclusively for Indians. Bacone offered Crumbo the unique opportunity to familiarize himself with his heritage and to instill in him cultural pride. At that time he conducted research into Indian design and revived ancient techniques of silverwork, vegetable dying, and weaving.
Crumbo’s career has been diverse; known also as a musician and Indian ceremonial dancer, Crumbo played the cedar wood flute and danced with Thurlow Lieurance’s symphony in Wichita. He also worked as a designer with the Douglas Corporation, with the Gilcrease Collection in Tulsa, and from 1960 to 1968 as curator of the El Paso Museum of Art.
A Pottawatomie
Indian, Crumbo explores in his art the traditions and ceremonies of his
own tribe as well as those of the Creek, Sioux, and Kiowa nations, and
says of his work, “I
have always painted with the desire of developing Indian art so that it
may be judged on art standards rather on its value as a curio—I am
attempting to record Indian customs and legends now, while they are
alive, to make them a part of the great American culture before these,
too, become lost, only to be fragmentarily pieced together by fact and
supposition.
Crumbo works in oil and egg tempera, as well as in watercolor, sculpture, stained glass, and silkscreen. Under the guidance of Olle Nordmark, he also learned etching. The largest collection of Crumbo’s work, about 175 paintings, is owned by the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, although his work has been exhibited in many museums throughout the United States.
Virginia Mecklenburg The Public as Patron: A History of the Treasury Department Mural Program (College Park, Maryland: University of Maryland, n.d.)





