Kamiakan's Dreamers, 1982
dick ibach
American (born 1940, died 2021)
Location: Spanaway Lake High School, Spanaway
About the Artwork
‘Kamiakan's Dreamers’ by dick ibach features the bright colors and zigzag patterns for which he is known. Many of his artworks suggest a story, but he also believes that you, the viewer, should interpret the story via the artwork’s “visual language” of colors, shapes, and textures.
Chief Kamiakin (ca. 1800-1877) was an influential chief of the Yakama Tribe, a reluctant signer of the 1855 treaty creating the Yakama Reservation, and a key Tribal leader during the Indian Wars of 1855-1858.
This artwork was acquired for the State Art Collection in partnership with Bethel School District.
About the Artist
Spokane, Eastern Washington-based artist dick ibach (1940-2021) created paintings that combine figurative imagery with expressive forms, symbolism, and intense patterning. His art is humorous and often based on his memories: "It is my intention to speak of the contradictions of the human condition: to address both the nobility and stupidity of it all." He believes that the viewer must develop a “visual literacy” and not expect explanations, because “Artists are visual, and their imagery is visual… Words are for poets.”ibach was born and grew up in Yakima, Central Washington. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Seattle University and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, in 1972. He taught art at Spokane Falls Community College for over fifteen years. He was also a Jesuit brother for ten years during the 1960s and he worked many odd jobs such as a hospital orderly, sod buster, cattle brander, grave digger, and cabinet maker. These experiences shaped his point of view as an artist.