Otellie Loloma ran a shop at the Kiva Craft Center in
Scottsdale, Arizona with her husband in the 1950s. She was one of the first instructors hired for the Southwest Indian Art Project in
Tucson, Arizona, a summer institute funded by the
Rockefeller Foundation in 1960 to 1961. She joined the faculty of the
Institute of American Indian Arts in
Santa Fe, New Mexico, when it opened in 1962, a position she held until her retirement in 1988. One of her notable students was potter
Robert Tenorio (
Kewa Pueblo). In 1991, she was honored with a
Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award. In addition to her expertise in pottery, Loloma taught Native American dance with colleague
Josephine Myers-Wapp (
Comanche); they performed at the
White House and at the
1968 Summer Olympics with their students. In 1970, she was one of two women among eight diverse artists featured in an ABC documentary, "With These Hands: The Rebirth of the American Craftsman," along with
Paul Soldner,
Peter Voulkos,
Dorian Zachai (the other woman artist),
Clayton Bailey,
James Tanner,
Harry Nohr, and
J. B. Blunk. == Personal life ==