Background
Abeyta was born in 1918. He is named after his father, Narciso. His mother was Pablita.
Abeyta was born in 1918. He is named after his father, Narciso. His mother was Pablita.
He attended the Santa Fe Indian School, starting in 1939. Dorothy Dunn was his teacher. Eventually, he attended the University of New Mexico.
He started drawing when he was eleven. Abeyta was a Golden Gloves boxer. He served in World World War II (United States Army) as a code talker.
After he returned from service, he was unable to work for ten years due to his experiences at war.
He trained under Raymond Jonson. Abeyta was primarily a painter.
His paintings document Navajo life, and use brush stroke techniques that are reminiscent of Navajo rugs. He had two known commissions for work as a muralist.
A 1934 mural for a social science classroom in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in 1939 for Maisel"s Indian Trading Post in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Abeyta married Sylvia Ann a Quaker woman. She was a non-Native American ceramics artist. They had seven children, including artists Tony Abeyta and Pablita Abeyta.
The family lived in Gallup, New Mexico.
He died in 1998 from a cerebral hemorrhage. His work is held in the collections of the National Gallery of Art, National Museum of the American Indian, and the Museum of New Mexico.
Translating Navajo Worlds: the Art of Narciso (Ha-So-De) and Tony Abeyta, 1994, Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe, New Mexico.