“My grandfather made jewelry and began teaching me. He was very secretive about it. In a canyon away from their hogan he had dug out the earth, and then placed brush and tree limbs over the top. This was his workshop, and you would not see it unless you knew it was there. I stayed with my grandparents until the 1960’s. He kept his workshop away from the house. I was around 9 years old. Then I went to live with my mother in Crown Point.
“Around 1972, I went out on my own. Started making my first pieces and would sell to Gilbert Ortega. The work was all silver, and was sand cast work. However, when silver go high around 1974 I stopped making jewelry and went to work for the mine. I did lots of different stuff, even worked for a refinery around Galveston. Did these different jobs for the rest of the 1970’s.
“My sister was married to Harry Morgan, and he really taught me how to design a piece. Before I never paid much attention to the style, that changed because of Harry. He also had a big name and was well known. I wanted to be one of those people. My grandfather told me “When you leave something her, your name will always be here.”
Kirk Smith (1957-2012) Diné (Navajo) was tragically killed in Albuquerque in 2012 by a drunk driver. He was the father of 8 children and grandfather of 13 grandchildren.
