Diane Reyna
1998 Dubin Fellow
Diane is from Taos Pueblo, north of Santa Fe. She also has relatives from San Juan Pueblo.
Diane did not study art formally, but grew up around it at her parents trading
post/gallery, called "Tony Reyna's," named for her father. The trading post is
at Taos Pueblo, just south of the village, nestled among tall trees and green horse
pastures.
Although Diane has always been involved in the arts, she studied pre-law at New Mexico
State in Las Cruces, and completed her last year at the University of New Mexico
concentrating on journalism.
Diane is most well known for being the producer and director of the PBS award winning
documentary "Surviving Columbus." This landmark two-hour film documentsfrom the
perspective of the Southwestern Pueblo Indiansthe history of Spanish and Anglo invasion
of their homeland.
Throughout her life Diane has continued to sketch, draw, paint, and sculpt. The
inspiration for her artwork is based on the energies in nature. Her work relates to a
Pueblo symbolic language, similar in concept to the designs painted on Pueblo Indian
pottery.
Image: [Right] Untitled, by
Diane Reyna, copyright 1999
Read about the IARC Painting
Convocation.