Collection: Seyesnem Hopi Bronze
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Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Greeting The Sun
Regular price From $ 28,900.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Harvest Dream
Regular price $ 15,800.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
First Born
Regular price $ 8,900.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Place Where Butterflies Land
Regular price From $ 8,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Born of Clay
Regular price $ 8,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Polimana (Butterfly Girl)
Regular price $ 7,900.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
To The Springs
Regular price $ 7,800.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Mother's Gift
Regular price $ 7,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Summer's Song
Regular price $ 7,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Lines of Time
Regular price $ 5,600.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Butterfly World
Regular price $ 5,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
Desert Sky
Regular price $ 5,200.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Krystal Seyesnem
Rhythms of Nature
Regular price $ 4,800.00Regular priceUnit price per -
Vendor:Kim Seyesnem
August Rain
Regular price $ 4,300.00Regular priceUnit price per
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Kim started her art career as a child finding rocks in the washes in Arizona and painting figures, which her family still keeps today. She started sculpting her Hopi maidens over twenty years ago and still has yet to scratch the surface of her cultural history. "The Hopi Tribe of Northern Arizona, is thousands of years old. I have a lifetime to fully explain my people and their history. I know many of my collectors now understand more about the women and their powerful place in Hopi history."
She originally worked in the traditional scrape-and-smooth method, which Hopi potters have used for thousands of years. Kim's degree from Northern Arizona University in Fine Arts, sculpture and bronze casting has become to be a personal satisfaction for her art career.
Kim has been casting bronze for over 35 years and continues to enamor her collectors and the Southwest art scene with her latest designs. "My bronze career has really taken off, and has earned me positions in museum, corporate and private collections all over the world." Kim is one of the first Hopis to work in bronze as an Art Medium and one of the first American Indian Women to work in bronze, which is historically a male dominated field of Art.
Kim has been featured in many national magazine articles and her works have been published in various books on Southwest Art. She has won numerous awards in Art and Sculpture shows across the United States in both Native and non-Native events. She also had the privilege of being able to serve two two-year terms on the Board of Directors for SWAIA, who runs the Santa Fe Indian Market, the largest American Indian Art show in the United States in August on the plaza of Santa Fe, New Mexico.




Kim started her art career as a child finding rocks in the washes in Arizona and painting figures, which her family still keeps today. She started sculpting her Hopi maidens over twenty years ago and still has yet to scratch the surface of her cultural history. "The Hopi Tribe of Northern Arizona, is thousands of years old. I have a lifetime to fully explain my people and their history. I know many of my collectors now understand more about the women and their powerful place in Hopi history."
She originally worked in the traditional scrape-and-smooth method, which Hopi potters have used for thousands of years. Kim's degree from Northern Arizona University in Fine Arts, sculpture and bronze casting has become to be a personal satisfaction for her art career.
Kim has been casting bronze for over 35 years and continues to enamor her collectors and the Southwest art scene with her latest designs. "My bronze career has really taken off, and has earned me positions in museum, corporate and private collections all over the world." Kim is one of the first Hopis to work in bronze as an Art Medium and one of the first American Indian Women to work in bronze, which is historically a male dominated field of Art.
Kim has been featured in many national magazine articles and her works have been published in various books on Southwest Art. She has won numerous awards in Art and Sculpture shows across the United States in both Native and non-Native events. She also had the privilege of being able to serve two two-year terms on the Board of Directors for SWAIA, who runs the Santa Fe Indian Market, the largest American Indian Art show in the United States in August on the plaza of Santa Fe, New Mexico.