Maria Chabot (1913–2001), was an advocate for Native American arts, a rancher, and a friend of Georgia O'Keeffe. She led the restoration of her house in Abiquiú, New Mexico, and took the photograph of O'Keeffe entitled Women Who Rode Away, in which the artist was on the back of a motorcycle driven by Maurice Grosser.[1] Their correspondence was published in the book Maria Chabot—Georgia O'Keeffe: Correspondence 1941-1949.

Maria Chabot
Maria Chabot and Skull, 1944
Born
Maria Lea Chabot

September 19, 1913
San Antonio, Texas
DiedJuly 9, 2001 (age 87)
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Occupation(s)Indigenous peoples rights activist, writer
SpouseDana K. Bailey (married in 1961 for six months)
PartnerDorothy Stewart (1933–1939)

Chabot has documented and promoted Spanish colonial and Native American art in the Southwest and facilitated the development of the Santa Fe Indian Market from small fairs throughout the state. She was executive secretary of the New Mexico Association on Indian Affairs. Chabot has been described as "a photographer, writer, and explorer".[2]

Early life

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Maria Lea Chabot was born on September 19, 1913, in San Antonio, Texas,[3][4] the daughter of Charles Jasper Chabot, a capitalist, and his third wife Olive Anderston Johnston, Chabot.[a] Maria Chabot had three half-sibblings who reached adulthood from her parents' previous marriages: Frederick Charles Chabot, Edith Lilian Chabot, and James Kennedy Johnston.[4][b]

Chabot developed an interest in writing and painting in her teens.[7] After graduating from high school, Chabot took a job as copywriter at a San Antonio department store and also wrote short stories.[8] She continued to write fiction into the 1960s, but the short stories and novels were never published.[9]

Chabot moved to Santa Fe about 1931, when she was 18.[10][11] She traveled in 1933 to Mexico City to pursue her interests in literature and art[2] and visit a relative, Emily Edwards, who lived there at the time.[3][4] She met sisters Dorothy Stewart and Margretta Stewart Dietrich, Olive Rush, Erna Fergusson, as well as José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera, and other notable Mexican artists.[12][7] Stewart became an integral part of her life, professionally and romantically, in the 1930s.[2]

Dorothy Stewart

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After Chabot and Stewart met, they began a romantic relationship.[2] Stewart had asked Chabot to assist her with a fresco for a theatre in Albuquerque.[7] They lived together in Santa Fe and traveled extensively during the 1930s. They visited Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Through Stewart, Chabot met many influential, progressive people, like friend and benefactor Mary Cabot Wheelwright, archaeologist Jesse L. Nusbaum, and Native American pottery expert Kenneth M. Chapman.[2][13] Grace Guest, assistant curator of Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., became her friend.[13] The romantic relationship with Stewart ended in 1939.[2] The women remained close friends until Stewart's death in 1955.[7]

Career

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Advocate for Native Americans

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In 1934, she went with Stewart to Santa Fe, New Mexico and she was employed by the New Mexico Department of Vocational Education. She worked at the federal Indian Arts and Crafts Board in 1935.[3] With these agencies and as part of a Works Progress Administration (WPA) initiative, she photographed and documented Spanish Colonial and Native American arts and crafts in the Southwest[1][3] and territorial architecture in New Mexico.[14] To complete the photographic survey, she traveled throughout the Southwestern United States with Stewart in the 1930s and 1940s.[15] She photographed the collection of Mary Cabot Wheelwright, who was a noted collector of Navajo art, now in the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian.[1] In the 1930s, Chabot published articles on Native American arts and crafts,[15] for New Mexico Magazine to inform potential buyers on how to identify valuable works of art.[16]

 
Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Chabot was made the executive secretary of the New Mexico Association on Indian Affairs in 1936.[1] During that time, she came up with the idea for the Santa Fe Indian Market[10] like the outdoor markets in Mexico. Held at the Palace of the Governors,[3] the market held weekly fairs and rented schools buses to transport Native Americans to the markets where they could sell their jewelry, pottery, or other wares.[1][10] Initially, local businesses opposed the Native American markets, which were established by Chabot to promote their works. She visited pueblos and encouraged artists to sell their works, including Maria Martinez, a potter of the San Ildefonso Pueblo. She worked then at the federal Indian Arts and Crafts Board where she established cooperative marketing organizations on reservations.[1]

Rancher

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Chabot lived at Mary Cabot Wheelwright's Los Luceros property in Alcalde, New Mexico, after then end of her relationship with Dorothy Stewart.[1][2][c] She was a companion and ran Wheelwright's cattle ranch, farm, and fruit tree orchard for 20 years.[1][10] She worked in the fields with the men.[14] During that period, she was president of the local irrigation association.[10] Wheelwright died in 1958 and the Los Luceros was deeded to Chabot. It was onerous for Chabot to manage the property and she sold it to Charles and Nina Collier in the early 1960s.[18][d]

Georgia O'Keeffe

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In 1940, Chabot met O'Keeffe, with whom she had a friendship that allowed for Chabot to write in a peaceful setting and for O'Keefe to paint and spend part of the year in New York with her husband Alfred Stieglitz.[19] Chabot spent the summers and falls at her house on the Ghost Ranch from 1941 to 1944, managing the ranch in the summers. During the winter and spring, Chabot returned to San Antonio.[20] She camped with O'Keeffe in northern New Mexico and was captured in the painting Maria goes to a Party in one of O'Keeffe's paintings of their trips.[1]

Beginning in 1945,[20] Chabot led the restoration of an adobe hacienda (Georgia O'Keeffe Home and Studio) in Abiquiú for O'Keeffe, who oversaw the restoration.[1][21] Chabot said of the experience, "I had never found anything as romantic as this beat-up building, a ruin really... It took six months just to get the pigs out of the house."[1]

Chabot and O'Keeffe had exchanged almost 700 letters until 1986 when O'Keeffe died.[20] In her later years, Chabot assembled her correspondence with O'Keeffe and photographs to illustrate a book, but did not complete the book in her lifetime. When she died, the materials were transferred to the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum Research Center.[22] The book Maria Chabot—Georgia O'Keeffe: Correspondence 1941-1949 was published in 2004.[19][23]

Later years and death

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In 1961, Chabot married radio astronomer Dana K. Bailey who works at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Married for only six months, she said, "we were much better as friends than as husband and wife." In the 1960s, she sold the ranch that she had inherited from Wheelwright and moved to Albuquerque, where she cared for her mother.[1]

She was named a "Living Treasure" of Santa Fe in 1996. Chabot died on July 9, 2001, at 87 years of age in an Albuquerque hospital.[1]

Notes

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  1. ^ Her paternal grandfather, Charles Stooks Chabot, was a British consular agent[3] or foreign service agent to Mexico. Upon leaving Mexico, Chabot and his wife Mary Van Derlip Chabot moved to San Antonio, Texas, where he was a commission agent and she was a Spanish colonial art collector and an artist.[5] Maria's father was born in Mexico.[6]
  2. ^ Frederick was the son of Charles and his first wife, Pauline Wachter Chabot, who died during childbirth. Edith Lilian Chabot was the son of Charles and his second wife, Lucille Branch Hugo Chabot. Charles Hugo Chabot was also a child from the second marriage. He and Lucille died in 1907 in a drowning accident. James Kennedy Johnston was the son of James Kennedy Johnston and Maria Chabot's mother.[4]
  3. ^ Cabot lived across the road from Wheelwright's Casa Grande residence with a woman. When Wheelwright was at Los Luceros, Chabot lived at Casa Grande.[14] Casa Grande is the 24-bedroom adobe residence on Los Luceros.[17]
  4. ^ Charles Collier helped Georgia O'Keeffe find the hacienda in Abiquiú, New Mexico that Chabot would restore.[18]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Douglas Martin (July 15, 2001). "Maria Chabot, 87, Dies; Began Indian Market and Was an O'Keeffe Associate". The New York Times. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Ortega, Ethan (Fall 2019). "Spinster Acts". El Palacio. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Duggan, Tori. "Library Guide: Maria Chabot: Biography". okeeffemuseum.libguides.com. Retrieved 2021-03-31.
  4. ^ a b c d O'Keeffe 2003, p. 17.
  5. ^ Williams, Docia Shultz (1997). When Darkness Falls: Tales of San Antonio Ghosts and Hauntings. Taylor Trade Publications. pp. 46–47. ISBN 978-1-55622-536-9.
  6. ^ "Maria Chabot, San Antonio, Texas", United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration
  7. ^ a b c d O'Keeffe 2003, p. 18.
  8. ^ O'Keeffe 2003, pp. 17–18.
  9. ^ O'Keeffe 2003, pp. 14, 17.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Obituary for Maria Chabot". The Santa Fe New Mexican. 2001-07-11. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  11. ^ "Obituary for Maria Chabot: Founder of Nature Preserve, Indian Market Dies at 87". Albuquerque Journal. 2001-07-11. p. 14. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  12. ^ "Collection: Maria Chabot Papers". archive.okeeffemuseum.org. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  13. ^ a b O'Keeffe 2003, p. 19.
  14. ^ a b c Markesteyn, Marie; Walsh, Candace (Fall 2017). "The Accidental Angel". El Palacio. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  15. ^ a b "Maria Chabot to Olive C. Chabot, 1938 April through 1938 July". archive.okeeffemuseum.org. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  16. ^ "To Market, To Market". El Palacio. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  17. ^ "Los Luceros Historic Site". New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  18. ^ a b Miller, Michael (Fall 2017). "The Secret Sanctuary". El Palacio.
  19. ^ a b Michael Kilian (March 25, 2004). "The little-known woman in Georgia O'Keeffe's life". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  20. ^ a b c O'Keeffe 2003, p. 14.
  21. ^ "Inside Georgia O'Keeffe's Abiquiu home". Albuquerque Journal. 2022-06-26. pp. A8. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  22. ^ O'Keeffe 2003, p. 16.
  23. ^ O'Keeffe 2003, pp. 15–16.

Bibliography

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