Virginia Stroud
1951
Virginia Stroud Of Cherokee and Creek
descent, Virginia Alice Stroud was born
March 13, 1951 in Madera, California. She
was educated in public schools in California
and Oklahoma, and graduated from Muskogee,
Oklahoma Central High School in 1969.
Virginia attended Bacone Junior College In
Oklahoma from 1969-1970 and the University
of Oklahoma, 1971-73, summer 1975, and
1976-77, majoring in elementary education
and art. Over the past thirty years,
Virginia Stroud has established herself as a
leading contemporary Native American artist
and has compiled an impressive record in the
process. The above quote typifies her
concept of aesthetic values and the
objectives she attempts to achieve in her
paintings. Her objectives are and
methodology is further exemplified when she
states, "As an artist I touch the human
chord that erases the multicultural
boundaries and ask the viewer to look for
the familiar and not the differences of
humanity." Continuing in the earliest
traditional painting style, she does not
paint the facial features, and individual
identity passes into the background.
Characters are recognized by their clothing
and their identities are established by
their roles. This is especially true of the
Native American women whose “role as
caretaker, nurturer, gatherer and spiritual
instructor remained the same, handed down
from one generation of daughters to
another." Identity is established by what is
familiar to a culture, and the viewer is
asked to both recognize the differences
through identity and to overlook those
differences, thereby enriching the spiritual
world by minimizing the distance between
themselves and the art. "I paint for my
people. Art is a way for our culture to
survive...perhaps the only way. More than
anything, I want to become an orator, to
share with others the oldest of Indian
traditions. I want people to look back at my
work just like today we're looking back at
the ledger drawings and seeing how it was
then. I'm working one hundred years in front
of those people and saying 'this is how we
still do it...we still have our
traditions.'"