This article was originally published in Reno News & Review on June 6, 2019.

Jack Malotte eased into a lawn chair in a thin strip of shade, as the June sun grew higher and hotter. He’d been working on his mural behind the Nevada Museum of Art all morning. “I mostly paint landscapes,” he said. “They’re mostly patterned after places I’ve lived at.” Malotte, who is Western Shoshone and Washoe, grew up in Reno and graduated from Wooster High in 1971. He went to California College of the Arts in Oakland, lived all over Northern Nevada and taught high school art in Nixon.

With assistance from artists including Theda New Breast from Montana, left, Jack Malotte painted a mural on a free standing wall at the Nevada Museum of Art in June.

“A lot of this looks like Duckwater,” he said about the mural. That’s a town in eastern Nevada, headquarters of the Duckwater Indian Reservation—hundreds of miles from any city and not far from the nation’s largest nuclear test site. Twenty years ago, Malotte became one of the town’s 200-ish residents, and he still lives there.

Three assistants were adding details to the already underpainted mural, and some muted purple shapes were already recognizable as the peaks of a mountain range as seen from across a wide desert valley. With narrow brushes, local artist Ben Aleck, Kevin Jones from Woodfords, California, and Theda New Breast from Montana, carefully painted eagle feathers and lightning bolts. Next, Malotte planned to stencil on geometric designs from Washoe baskets and paint a large, round moon, with as much texture as he can see in Eastern Nevada’s dark night sky. “In Duckwater, we see it so clear,” he said.

Malotte’s retrospective at the Nevada Museum of Art includes dozens of drawings, prints and paintings, spanning several styles and decades. Photo: Kris Vagner

While Malotte’s acrylics, watercolors, pen drawings, screenprints and posters pay homage to Nevada’s ranges and valleys, the landscape serves another purpose in his work, too. It’s both a subject and a backdrop for satire, critique and protest.

His vistas are wide, wonderful and dotted with oceans of sagebrush, but you’re not likely to see the state tourism board publishing the Jack Malotte calendar any time soon. These same vistas also feature real-world uses of the land—open-pit gold mining, nuclear testing and Air Force surveillance, for starters. The artist also makes paintings about specific actions, such as the Western Shoshone Sacred Lands Association challenging the federal government to return the tribe members’ ancestral land in the 1970s. He’s worked with activists such as longtime indigenous rights defenders Carrie and Mary Dann, and Reno activist Bob Fulkerson, making posters for their causes and even logging one arrest during an anti-nuclear protest at the Nevada Test Site. (According to an essay by the NMA’s Ann Wolfe, the artist considers this a feather in his cap: “As Malotte often likes to say, ’Remember, you’re not an activist until you’ve been arrested.’”)

Malotte’s Duckwater home is not far from Nevada’s nuclear test site. His subject matter often includes nuclear explosions and fighter jets. This 1983 ink and watercolor piece is titled “The End.” Photo: Courtesy Nevada Museum of Art.

Malotte delves into every subtlety he can find, resisting any simplistic “us-versus-them” setup. He paints a deep, complex picture of indigenous culture that’s not likely to end up in the Nevada Indian Commission’s calendar either. While he depicts people like the Dann sisters with reverence and love, he sometimes satirizes aspects of Native American life, for example, when he holds up a mirror to alcoholism in indigenous communities.

If this all sounds like a lot of subject matter to sort out, Malotte’s retrospective is probably the best place to take it all in. While he is well known in Nevada, and excerpts of his work have been exhibited all over the West, there hasn’t yet been a show that spans his entire career, and it’s marvelous to look at decades worth of work by an artist who’s taken such a close, honest look at Nevada.

“The Art of Jack Malotte” is on view at the Nevada Museum of Art through Oct. 20. 

Posted by Kris Vagner

Kris Vagner is Double Scoop’s Editor & Publisher.