For more than 50 years, Ed Singer has used oil paints on canvas to depict life in the Navajo Nation. His style mixes realism and expressionism, and he employs techniques drawn from European oil painting masters. Singer is part of a generation of Indigenous artists from the 1960s and 1970s who asserted a visual sovereignty in their paintings, to confront Native American stereotypes, and depict Native American life in a modern context.
In this episode, we meet 73-year-old Ed Singer in his studio in Cortez, CO, and learn a bit about his journey as an artist.
Written and produced by Adam Burke and Kirbie Bennett.
Host: Kirbie Bennett
Musical score: Adam Burke
Additional musical scoring: Lawn Games
© 2025, Magic City Studios, llc
History is under our feet and all around us. Old buildings, streets, statues and signs. We drive by remnants of the past every day,...
In 1881, an artist from New York visited Southwest Colorado when he created a print called "The Magic City of the Southwest." To the...
Durango loves to promote its western frontier town image. It's easy to envision the bustling boardwalks in the late 1800s and imagine an incorporated...