| Lakota
Artist
Jhon Goes In Center is an enrolled member of the Oglala Lakota
Tribe on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
As well as being known as a silversmith, Goes In Center has
mastered many traditional artistic techniques within his Lakota
culture and many other contemporary techniques. Such mastered
traditional Lakota techniques are stone and wood carving for
traditional prayer pipes, bead and quillwork, feather-work,
hide-tanning, rawhide work and related technologies utilized
in Lakota utilitarian, ceremonial and artistic expressions.
He is a traditional-style dancer and has studied and created
Lakota traditional dance regalia and accoutrements for not
only himself, but for family, relatives and friends. Goes
In Center considers these core skills and techniques as foundational
to any other artistic expressions he has applied in his paintings,
sculptures, metalwork and engraving.
Lakota Silversmith and Engraver
While pursuing his Museum Studies degree at the University
of Colorado in 1974, Goes In Center attributes his inspirations
to learn silverwork techniques and engraving by exposure to
tools, time and space at the Henderson Museum restoration
and preservation laboratories. A self taught silversmith,
Goes In Center researched the origins of Plains Indian Silverwork
and discovered an inherent trait of his ancestors and how
they incorporated new materials and techniques and made it
all blend within the Lakota way of life. Since then and now,
Jhon Goes In Center has chosen to express his creativity,
skill and experience with in his own definition of Lakota-ness
through his custom jewelry.
Goes In Center has studied under the tutelage of a nationally
renowned firearms engraver, John Rohner. Since his study and
application of engraving techniques, Goes In Center’s
engraving mentor John Rohner states, “ In more than
forty years of teaching, I have known no individual more adept
in traditional decorative Plains Indian techniques than Jhon
Goes In Center. The choice of this renaissance Lakota artist
to specialize in metal work has elevated a craft to the level
of “Fine Art”.”
Jhon Goes In Center has gone on to exhibit his work and has
been recognized for his endeavors by winning various juried
shows. To his credit is winning a first place at the prestigious
Northern Plains Tribal Arts show in 1991 and placing in subsequent
shows. Goes In Center has exhibited his work and lectured
at the Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of Natural History.
Goes In Center considers the inclusion of one of his jewelry
pieces in an exhibition organized by Evan Maurer of the Minneapolis
Institute of Arts his greatest honor. The exhibition: Visions
Of The People, A Pictorial History of Plains Indian Life is
an overview of Plains Indian art and art history from ancient
petroglyphs to contemporary paintings. Goes In Center’s
Plains Indian jewelry and artwork resides with many discerning
individuals and collectors.
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