Cookie Lady
About The Original Painting
Created: 2002
Original Medium: Oil on Canvas
Original Status: The Kenneth M. Freeman Collection
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About This Limited Edition
Limited Edition Size: 1000
Giclee On Canvas - Laminated and Stretched
Size: 24 inches X 16 inches
Authorized by The Kenneth M. Freeman Legacy Collection
Certificate of Authenticity by The Fine Art Registry
Cookie Lady has been featured in the Artist at Work Museum Exhibition at the Booth Museum as well as the Kenneth M. Freeman show at the Fondazione Metropolitan Museum in Milan, Italy March/April 2007. It is prominently featured in the museum books "Artist at Work" which represents Freeman's museum book and also the Milan Exhibition book: Kenneth M. Freeman. The painting has also been featured in Western Art Collector Magazine.
Kenneth M. Freeman painted several of the Taos Native Americans. Ken discovered that they were, however, often reluctant to share information with strangers. They wanted to be able to maintain their traditional way of life. Ken became someone that they knew and trusted. He heard the stories of their history and culture and connected with their soul in his paintings.
Over 1,000 years old, and virtually unchanged in the 400 years since the white man first saw them, the pueblos of the Taos Native Americans are the sensitive attempt of a reverent people to build in harmony with the natural beauty around them.
The Taos Pueblo tribe holds its culture very close to its heart. Ken found that the residents live very similarly to the earlier generations of ancestors who came before them. He observed that many members of the Taos Pueblo community work tirelessly to instill in the younger generation a respect for the language, customs and traditional ceremonies of the tribe.
