Awa Tsireh was born into the San Ildefonso Pueblo. His family was very active in the arts. His parents were Alfonsita Martinez, a potter, and Juan Estaba Roybal, the nephew of potter Cresencio Martinez.[4] His nephew José Disiderio (J.D.) Roybal also became a painter.[5] His siblings included the artists Josefa Roybal, Santana Roybal Martinez (1909-2002), and Ralph Roybal.[6][7]
Awa Tsireh was one of the earliest of the San Ildefonso painters. His formal education ended at grade school but he drew from his culture and informal training.[8] Awa Tsireh was also among the students of Elizabeth Willis DeHuff, who instructed students in painting from her own home.[9][10]
In 1920, Awa Tsireh married a young woman from his village. The following year she gave birth to a son, but both mother and child died soon after. Affected greatly, Awa Tsireh moved to his parents' home.[7]
It is not known when, or from whom, Awa Tsireh learned silversmithing, but by 1931 newspaper articles described him as a painter, silversmith and dancer. Around 1930 he began working in the summer months at Garden of the Gods Trading Post in Colorado Springs, Colorado and he was employed there into the 1940s.[7] His sister, Santana Martinez, recalled that "during the summer during the thirties and forties he used to go to a shop in Colorado Springs and do paintings and silverwork there."[15] He worked in silver, copper, nickel silver and aluminum.[16]
Awards and honors
1931–1933 – Exposition of Indian Tribal Arts (EITA), sponsored by the College Art Association
^Henderson, Alice Corbin (6 September 1925). "The World of Art: A Boy Painter Among the Pueblo Indians and Unspoiled Native Work". The New York Times Magazine.
^Seymour, Tryntje Van Ness (1988). When the Rainbow Touches Down. Phoenix: The Heard Museum. p. 156. ISBN0-934351-01-5.
^Messier, Pat; Messier, Kim (2019). Garden of the Gods Trading Post: Images of America. Mount Pleasant, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 111–116. ISBN978-1467102988.