Ten Thousand Prayers At Night
Following a vivid and compelling dream in April 2000, I found myself writing a biography of a Ute woman named Chipeta. Over the next four years I traced Chipeta’s history from the American Southwest to traditional Ute lands along the Uncompahgre River, Colorado Rocky Mountains and the Great Plains. Ever since I saw the rock art and petroglyphs on the red sandstone canyons of this region, I was fascinated. These ancient images seemed to jump off the sandstone, charging the air with spiritual ancestral energy. These were the recorded stories of the People who inhabited the region for centuries. I saw art that depicted many events—including the signing of treaties with the United States Government prior to the forceful removal of the Ute tribes to reservations. Later I would help the Southern Arapaho and Southern Cheyenne Tribes of Oklahoma, produce four books for their young children. Histories written and illustrated by the members of the tribes as well as me.
While working with other tribes in writing workshops, I learned much about the spiritual relationship the tribes had, and still have, with the earth, sky, and the creatures who exist there. The Milky Way was a place where Ancestors went when they passed so they could watch over their loved ones on Earth. I heard prayers in the old languages from long ago, remembered by the elders of the tribes. Songs and dances expressed gratitude to the Creator for another day or to celebrate a special event. My experiences over this period of time changed my life, my art, and my writing.
Journal sketches from my travels eventually became art at the encouragement of an art instructor, Homare Ikeda. He encouraged me to capture the spiritual energy of my experiences through paint and other mediums. Rock art symbols and my own experience growing up with Catholic imagery inspired me; I added some elements of each to my artwork to share my story with others. Each painting had its own voice and seemed to direct my hands and heart. Dots, lines, and shapes became prayers, and vibrant colors filled my canvases with palpable energy.
My time with the tribes taught me that I didn’t really know my own ancestry. I felt compelled to do more research and spent time working on my own genealogy. I learned that rock art is universal and can be seen around the world; from the caves in Lascaux, to tribes in Africa, and my own Nordic Ancestors. While the imagery changes from culture to culture, its power of meaning and communication is the same. It is in this universal language of life and prayer I share my art.
Vickie Leigh Krudwig