Tribal Affiliation
Cherokee Nation
P.O. Box 1947
Tahlequah, OK 74465
Eddie works in sculpture using stone and wood to carve.
Eddie Morrison specializes in creating three-dimensional works from
wood, stone & bronze. His contemporary tradtional style also
incorporates relief-carved images which give his work multiple layers
of visual interest & meaning.
A Cherokee Indian born September 29, 1946 at the Claremore Indian
Hospital, he was raised by his grandmother Jane Batt Brackett, a
full-blood Cherokee Indian in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. He attended
Northeastern State University in Tahlequah. He graduated from the
Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico with a degree
in Three Dimensional Arts. Other classes included Art Student League of
Denver and Marble Stone Carving.
Eddie's earliest artistic recollections were of his grandmother
& aunt designing & crafting hand made quilts along with
crocheted items. He remembers that "there was always someone doing something with wood" in his home & his surroundings. "My
best friend's father would sit for hours on end carving pieces of wood
into beautiful traditional bows & arrows, I believe I was more
influenced by him than any other person about my feeling for wood. I
was also greatly influenced by the great Apache artist, Allen Houser,
who was a guest lecturer & teacher at the Art Student League of
Denver." It was under Hauser's encouragement that he continued his
studies on a more advanced level at The Institute of American Indian
Arts in Santa Fe.
Honors besides Outstanding Student in Three Dimensional Art at the
Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, include awards won at
the prestigious Santa Fe Indian Market as well as many other art shows
throughout the United States. Eddie's work is in numerous private
collections througout the United States & several public
collections. His carvings & sculptures have also been displayed in
the office of the Speaker of the House at the State Capitol building in
Kansas & in the Capitol rotunda. Eddie was chosen as artist of the
month in June 2000 by the American Indian Arts & Crafts Shop in the
Department of Interior Building, Washington D.C. Eddie did a
commissioned monument of the Chisolm Trail on the Kansas/Oklahoma
border. His design was chosen for the first Christmas Ornament 2001,
produced by the Chreokee Nation.
"My statement about my work is that I consider the natural forms
of the wood & stone & believe in letting the material speak for
itself & feel that they have their own stories to tell."
"Besides my own feelings & interpretations, my ideas &
themes come from the philosophies of Indians about life, spirituality,
respect for life, animals & all that is around us given to us by
the Great Creator.
He maintains a studio and shows by appointment.