Raven Chacon Explained
Raven Chacon |
Birth Place: | Fort Defiance, Arizona, United States |
Education: | California Institute of the ArtsUniversity of New Mexico |
Known For: | sound art, non-vocal instrumentalist, installation art, composer, musician, visual artist |
Style: | noise music, experimental sound, composer, musician, visual artist |
Raven Chacon (born 1977) is a Diné composer, musician and artist. Born in Fort Defiance, Arizona within the Navajo Nation, Chacon became the first Native American to win a Pulitzer Prize for Music, for his Voiceless Mass in 2022.
He has also been a solo performer of noise music and worked with groups such as Postcommodity.[1]
Life and career
Raven Chacon was born in 1977 in Fort Defiance, Arizona, US within the Navajo Nation.[2] He attended the University of New Mexico, where he obtained his BA in Fine Arts in 2001, then received an MFA in music composition from the California Institute of the Arts.[3] He was a student of James Tenney, Morton Subotnick, Michael Pisaro, Wadada Leo Smith and Christopher Shultis.
Chacon's visual and sonic artwork has been exhibited widely in the U.S. and abroad.[4] His room-sized sound and text installation, Still Life, #3 (2015), was exhibited in the Transformer: Native Art in Light and Sound exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian, New York.[5] [6] His collective and solo work has been presented at Sydney Biennale,[7] Kennedy Center, the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14,[8] Adelaide International, Vancouver Art Gallery, ASU Art Museum, Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival,[9] the Heard Museum,[10] Chaco Canyon, and Performance Today.[11]
Chacon also performs in the groups KILT with Bob Bellerue, Mesa Ritual with William Fowler Collins, Endlings with John Dieterich, and collaborations with Laura Ortman. In 2016, he was commissioned by Kronos Quartet to compose a work for their Fifty For The Future project.[12]
Chacon serves as Composer-in-Residence with the Native American Composers Apprenticeship Project.[13] In 2012, he was awarded a Creative Capital[14] Visual Arts grant. In 2014, he was honored with a Native Arts and Cultures Foundation National Artist Fellowship in Music.[15] In 2018, Chacon was awarded the Berlin Prize by the American Academy in Berlin.[16]
In 2022, Chacon became the first Native American to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music, which he received for his composition Voiceless Mass.[17]
Postcommodity
Chacon was a member of the Native American art collective, Postcommodity, with whom he has developed multimedia installations which have been exhibited internationally.[18] Other members include Cristóbal Martínez, Kade L. Twist, Steven Yazzie and Nathan Young. In 2017, as part of Postcommodity, Chacon created the multimedia project, ...in memoriam, in Edmonton in 2017, curated by Ociciwan Contemporary Art Collective.[19]
Personal life
Chacon lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and is married to Candice Hopkins, a Tagish curator. His sister Nani Chacon is a muralist.
Awards and honors
Chacon has received numerous awards and honors for his work, including the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Music, an American Academy in Berlin Prize (music composition), a Creative Capital award (visual arts), a United States Artists fellowship (music), a Joan Mitchell Foundation fellowship, a Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship,[20] among others. Chacon received the inaugural Mellon Foundation Artist-in-Residence fellowship for the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center at Colorado College.[21] In October 2023, Chacon was named a MacArthur Fellow.[22]
Partial discography
- Inhale/Exhale (w/ Carlos Santistevan and Tatsuya Nakatani) (Other Minds Records, 2022)
- An Anthology of Chants Operations (Ouidah, 2020)
- Horse Notations (Cimiotti Recordings, 2020)
- Crisalide Fossile (w/ OvO) (Bronson, 2016)
- Your New Age Dream Contains More Blood Than You Can Imagine 12"LP (w/ Postcommodity) (Anarchymoon, 2011)
- Kitchen Sorcery (w/ Bob Bellerue) (Prison Tatt Records, 2011)
- At the Point Where the Rivers Crossed, We Drew Our Knives 12"LP (Anarchymoon, 2010)
- Black Streaked Hum (Lightning Speak/Featherspines, 2009)
- Overheard Songs (Innova, 2006)
- The Incredible 17000 km Split (split w/ Torturing Nurse) (8K Mob, 2006)
- Jesus Was a Wino (w/ Jeff Gburek) (Herbal Records, 2005)
- Still/life (Sicksicksick, 2004)
- Meet the Beatless (Sicksicksick, 2003)
Publications
External links
Notes and References
- Porter . Clayton . Studio Visit: Raven Chacon . Southwest Contemporary . August 2016 . October 2, 2020.
- Web site: Raven Chacon . . November 28, 2022 .
- Web site: Raven Chacon Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation, AZ . Creative Capital . October 3, 2020.
- Web site: Still Life No. 3: Raven Chacon . Heard Museum . October 2, 2020.
- Web site: Transformer: Native Art in Light and Sound . Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian . October 2, 2020.
- Ash-Milby . Kathleen . Kathleen Ash-Milby . Art that Moves . American Indian . Fall 2017 . 18 . 3 . October 2, 2020.
- Web site: Top 5 Videos Celebrating the 2012 Sydney Biennale BLOUIN ARTINFO. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140318092459/http://www.blouinartinfo.com/news/story/823194/top-5-videos-celebrating-the-2012-sydney-biennale . March 18, 2014 .
- Web site: Postcommodity. documenta 14 . May 20, 2022.
- Web site: Raven Chacon . San Francisco Electronic Music Festival . October 3, 2020.
- News: Timble . Lynn . Raven Chacon Returns to Phoenix, Explores Navajo Creation Story at the Heard . October 2, 2020 . Phoenix New Times . June 26, 2019.
- Web site: Performance Today . https://web.archive.org/web/20100705165619/http://performancetoday.publicradio.org/features/2010/music_that_matters/composing_on_the_reservation.shtml . July 5, 2010 . dead.
- Web site: Kronos Quartet. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160204070104/http://kronosquartet.org/fifty-for-the-future/composers/raven-chacon . February 4, 2016 .
- Web site: Native American Composers . . Gail . Wein . April 8, 2009. newmusicusa.org . January 30, 2022.
- Web site: Creative Capital. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120115031420/http://creative-capital.org/grantees/view/602/project:718 . January 15, 2012 .
- Web site: Raven Chacon | Native Arts and Cultures Foundation . May 12, 2014 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140415063106/http://www.nativeartsandcultures.org/individual/2014/raven-chacon . April 15, 2014 . Raven Chacon (Navajo) 2014 NACF Music Fellow
- Web site: Raven Chacon: INGA MAREN OTTO FELLOW IN MUSIC COMPOSITION - CLASS OF SPRING 2018 . American Academy in Berlin . October 2, 2020.
- Web site: Meet Raven Chacon, the first Native American to win the Pulitzer Prize for music. Tom. Huizenga. May 10, 2022. NPR.
- Web site: Postcommodity . Princeton University Art Museum . October 2, 2020.
- https://www.uhbooks.directory/2017/06/21/in-memoriam-postcommodity-alex-waterman-and-ociciwan/ Postcommodity, Alex Waterman and Ociciwan: "in memoriam..."
- Web site: Raven Chacon . November 7, 2013 . Native Arts and Culture Foundation . October 3, 2020.
- Web site: Raven Chacon, Lightning Speak . Colorado College . October 2, 2020.
- Web site: MacArthur Fellows - MacArthur Foundation . 2023-10-05 . www.macfound.org.