Riley Sunrise, Hopi Pueblo Painter
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“Another of the earlier Hopi artists, Riley Sunrise (Quoyavema) worked with Fred Kabotie and Waldo Mootzka in illustrating John Louw Nelson’s Rhythm for Rain. He is also known as Quoyavema or Kwayeshva, according to Nelson. Paintings by Riley Sunrise are comparable to Fred Kabotie’s, with some of them showing more action and most of them revealing less detail. Sunrise is represented in the collections of the Denver Art Museum, Gilcrease Institute (Tulsa), and the Southwest Museum. The Museum of the American Indian in New York has an extensive collection of his paintings of native Hopi dances.” (Clara Lee Tanner: Southwest Indian Painting: a changing art.)
According to Snodgrass, the birth date of Riley Sunrise (1914-2006) Quoyavema or Kwayeshva is unknown. She states that he was born in Anadarko, OK, and adopted by a Kiowa family. AskART lists his birth date as 1914, but their source for this date is not shown. He lived at Second Mesa, Arizona, on the Hopi Reservation.
Snodgrass states “While in the 3rd grade at Anadarko, the artist submitted a series of Hopi symbols in a statewide newspaper contest and received second award.”
TAGS: Fred Kabotie, Waldo Mootzka, Southwest Indian Painting: a changing art, Kiowa, Hopi


“Another of the earlier Hopi artists, Riley Sunrise (Quoyavema) worked with Fred Kabotie and Waldo Mootzka in illustrating John Louw Nelson’s Rhythm for Rain. He is also known as Quoyavema or Kwayeshva, according to Nelson. Paintings by Riley Sunrise are comparable to Fred Kabotie’s, with some of them showing more action and most of them revealing less detail. Sunrise is represented in the collections of the Denver Art Museum, Gilcrease Institute (Tulsa), and the Southwest Museum. The Museum of the American Indian in New York has an extensive collection of his paintings of native Hopi dances.” (Clara Lee Tanner: Southwest Indian Painting: a changing art.)