Search the Web 
Subjects: 30,116 | Messages: 63,902 | Mp3s: 953 | Videos: 103 | Members: 16,454 | Online: 198 | Newest : destino
Haitiwebs Home english  français  register  faq  contact us
Go to Haitiwebs Chat     Register   
Calendar Search Mark Forums Read
Art & Culture News, People, Regional History, Visual Art in Haiti
Welcome to the Foire d'Opinions Haitiennes forums.
You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Latest Top News ::.. Did You Know? De la responsabilité sociale des intellectuels Croix des Bouquets-Village Noailles-Art/La sculpture de fer comme moyen de survie Anye, anye, tolalito... Repenser la femme mystifiée Le trafic et la traite de personnes en hausse ! Retour de la série Marina sur nos petits écrans Le président René Préval n'est-il pas contraint de jeter du lest? Pawòl Anpil A la fois chaussée, trottoirs et marchés publics

Comment
 
LinkBack Article Tools Search this Article Display Modes
Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns

lois_mailou_jones_early_works_paintings_patterns-lois_mailou_jones_091506a18.jpg#1111;s Mailou Jones, Design for Cretonne Drapery Fabric #13, undated. Watercolor on paper, 30 x 20 inches. Courtesy of the Loїs Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust.
Loїs Mailou Jones, Design for Cretonne Drapery Fabric #13, undated. Watercolor on paper, 30 x 20 inches. Courtesy of the Loїs Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust.
Featured Articles
Article Tools
Show Printable Version  Email this Page 
Published by bana2166- 09-14-06
Post Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns

Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns
Loїs Mailou Jones, Design for Cretonne Drapery Fabric #13, undated. Watercolor on paper, 30 x 20 inches. Courtesy of the Loїs Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust.
BOSTON, MA.- After her graduation from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (SMFA), in 1927, Loїs Mailou Jones embarked on a successful career as a textile designer before earning international recognition as a celebrated American painter and noted scholar and teacher. Loїs Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927?1937, which focuses on the textile designs and studies Jones created at the outset of her career, is on view in the SMFA?s Grossman Gallery September 15?October 14, 2006.
A pioneering twentieth century artist, Loїs Mailou Jones worked for more than seven decades in a wide variety of styles, enjoying an extraordinary career that drew inspiration from France, Haiti, and Africa, as well as her native New England. As an African-American woman artist working in a racialized gender-biased society, Jones met great challenges in her lifetime but persevered to exhibit her paintings to the world and earn many national and international honors.
?Loïs Mailou Jones?s invaluable contributions to American art are a testament to her talent and invincible spirit,? says Deborah Dluhy, dean of the School and deputy director, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. ?We are so pleased to pay tribute to her great accomplishments by showcasing the design work she created following her graduation from the Museum School.?
Comprised of more than 30 studies and designs and including many pieces on display for the first time, Loїs Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927?1937 offers rare insight into Loїs Mailou Jones?s artistic beginnings and her grounding in the field of design. Jones?s pattern designs and designs for cretonnes, which show the strong use of color and great interest in other cultures that permeated her versatile and prolific career, were purchased, reproduced, and sold across the country by firms including Schumacher in New York and F. A. Foster in Boston. The design work in the exhibition is generously on loan from the Loїs Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust.
?Over a remarkably long career, Loïs? work remained fresh, energetic and compelling,? says Edmund Barry Gaither, executive director and museum director, National Center of Afro-American Artists. ?The ideas that are evident in her early designs were built upon and embellished in her later work giving it a structural clarity and colorful richness. Indeed, design remained key to her highly individualized synthesis of French, Haitian, African and American influences, and lent her work a wonderfully modern feeling.?
Loїs Mailou Jones was born in Boston in 1905 and began formal art training at the city?s High School of Practical Arts before receiving a scholarship to attend the Museum School, where she majored in design and received both the Susan Minot Lane Award and the Nathaniel Thayer Prize in Design. The work in this exhibition covers the 10-year period after her graduation until Jones?s trip to France in 1937. That first, extended foreign sojourn marked the beginning of Jones?s lifelong embrace of travel and world cultures, which informed both her art and her teaching at Howard University, where she taught painting and design for 47 years (1930?1977). The first African-American female artist to have a retrospective in a major museum (at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 1973), Jones?s paintings are included in many of the world?s major collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Museum of American Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Loїs Mailou Jones died in 1998 at the age of 92.
Loїs Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927?1937
will be on view at Grossman Gallery at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston, 230 The Fenway,
September 15?October 14, 2006.
Hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 AM to 5 PM,
and Thursday, 10 AM to 8 PM.
The gallery is closed on Sundays and holidays.
Admission is free.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Post New Article  Comment
Article Tools Search this Article
Search this Article:
Advanced Search
Display Modes
Posting Rules
You may not post new articles
You may not post comments
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Points Per Thread View: 2.00
Points Per Thread: 15.00
Points Per Reply: 10.00
Similar Threads
Article Article Starter Category Comments Last Post
Countries huge debt Write-Off in Works & Grants for Haiti in the next 3 years bana2166 Lakay/Haitian News 0 02-14-07 09:04 AM
Wyclef Names Quincy Jones' One of His Inspirations bana2166 Music/Entertaiment News 1 10-20-06 05:01 PM
Inter-American Development Bank agrees to new infrastructure works in Haiti bana2166 Ce Qui se Passe en Haiti 0 06-06-06 09:33 PM
"VOYAGE: Recent Works by Hëza" carrieart Top News 0 03-09-02 07:52 AM
"VOYAGE: Recent Works by Hëza" carrieart Arts & Spectacles 0 03-09-02 07:52 AM
copyrights © 1999 - haitiwebs.com, a Virtual Haitian Community. All rights reserved.
The time now is 11:43 PM.

SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0 ©2007, Crawlability, Inc.