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Lois Mailou Jones
1) At Howard University
2) Thomas, her father
3) Lois Mailou Jones, 1936
4) Lois and husband Verginaud
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• Loïs Mailou Jones (1905-1998) was an African-American artist.
• She produced a diverse body of artwork over her 70-year career.
• Worked in textile design and Impressionist-style paintings, Haitian- and African-inspired watercolors and paintings.
• Jones’s work embodied various styles of art prevalent during the 20th century.
Street Vendors, Haiti - 1978
Her works were mostly inspired by her experiences with discrimination, and the aftermath of the Harlem Renaissance.
In 1931, Lois Mailou Jones went to Paris. In Paris, she attended the Academe Julian, where she studied painting.
Harlem Renaissance (HR) is the name given to the period from the end of World War I and through the middle of the 1930s Depression, during which a group of talented African-American writers, thinkers and artists produced a sizable contribution to American culture.
Harlem Renaissance
The Great Migration which congregated black populations in northern cities like Chicago and New York in unprecedented numbers. The concentration, in New York city, occurred on the upper west side, in Harlem.
Displays poorness and everyday sullen life of a southerner
Jones shows a troubled emotion because she reveals separation among society
This creates a gloomy feeling within me due to unfortunate ways of life for some people
This brings attention to the ways of life for poor African Americans and lack of equal opportunity Negro Shack 1930
Her most popular works were a great number of oils and watercolors. These works carefully, and skillfully depict aspects of African masks, textiles, and figures.
Lois Mailou Jones was one of the first female African-American painters to depict African imagery.
Les Fetiches was completed during her stay in Paris. The accurate representation of the artifacts is a result of her first hand study of African masks. Les Fetiches is a blend of spirit and a stirring depiction ancestry.
Les Fetiches 1938
Ubi Girl from Tai Region combines motifs (objects forming a distinct design element) from different regions of Africa
Combines abstraction with realism and design with painting.
“By combining the motifs from various regions of Africa, I try to explore on canvas a sense of the underlying unity of all Africa.”
Ubi Girl from Tai Region 1972
Things to look for in Ubi Girl from Tai Region:
• Painted face: Many West African cultures welcome young men and women into adulthood following elaborate initiation ceremonies. Colours signify various cultural values in West Africa. White, for instance, often signifies purity.
• Geometric shape motif: Elaborate design motifs adorn a variety of West African textiles.
• Mask profile: Masks are one of the most prominent art forms in Africa. Masks are created for functional purposes such as religious ceremonies or ritual performances.
Moon Masque
mixed media, 1971
A simple flat geometric composition relates to the textile designs of west African textiles.
Patterns are ordered, the colours are flat and bold. The limited palette of Red, Blue, Black and Yellow helps unite the different sections together.
Nigeria 1971 - Watercolours
Combines pattern with 3D representations of African masks and symbols in a layered composition.
Skill is shown through the accurate blending of painted tones on the masks.
Symboles D'Afrique I1980Acrylic on Board
Damballah
1980
Petite Ballerina1982
Western style portrait painting has been included with flat African motifs and patterns.
The girl’s face is the first point of focus. She has been rendered skillfully including a range of tones to show the form of the portrait.
Haiti Demain?
Mixed media, 1987
Helped to change the perception of her race
through art and dance teaching, along with textile design and coaching sports
Made impressionism, oil painting, and individualistic art more popular
Paved the way for African Americans to have art exhibitions
Introduced Cubism and expressionism into American art
Helped lead the way for the blend of European and African American inspired artwork
Significance
Summers at Martha’s Vineyard inspired her
natural landscape and watercolor paintings She disliked being anonymous as a textile
designer, and therefore turned to painting Her trip to Paris allowed her to fully
understand African imagery and impressionism Trips to Haiti turned her artwork into more
spirited, geometric, colourful, and individual art
1973 - 1st African American Artist to have a solo show in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts
Interesting Facts
"Ascent of Ethiopia."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ascent_of_Ethiopia. N.p., 14 Mar. 2010. Web. 16 May 2010
"Lois Mailou Jones." http://www.dipity.com/timeline/Lois-Mailou-Jones/list. N.p., 2100. Web. 16 May 2010.
"Lois Mailou Jones." http://www.octobergallery.com/artists/jones.htm. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 May 2010.
"Lois Mailou Jones." Encyclopedia of World Biography Supplement, Vol. 20. Gale Group, 2000. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.:
Gale, 2010.
Bibliography