Monday, May 20, 2013

Book Cover Art











I am so honored to have my artwork on the cover of Dr. Ventria K. Patton’s new book, “The Grasp That Reaches Beyond the Grave, The Ancestral Call in Black Women’s Texts”. It was an unexpected treat as I greeted the mail carrier wondering what have I ordered now and forgot about. I’m already well into chapter one!!!  If you haven’t already heard about it please check it out it’s a really good book.  

Book Link:

Sunday, May 19, 2013

James Lesesne Wells





James Lesesne Wells
November 2, 1902-January 20, 1993

 
As a printmaker I’m always looking for inspiration and I came across the works of James Lesesne Wells. Wells was a graphic artist and art teacher. He was born in Atlanta, Georgia and later moved to Florida with his family.
Wells studied at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania for a year before transferring to Columbia University in New York, where he majored in art. Wells was not only influenced by African sculpture but he also studied the woodcuts of Albrecht Durer and the German Expressionists — Ernst Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Otto Muller, and Emile Nolde.
Although Wells saw prints as a major art form, he also worked in other areas such as painting and clay. So in 1929 he was invited to join the faculty at Howard University as a crafts teacher. He taught clay modeling, ceramics, sculpture, metal and block printing. It took him two years to convince the school that he and linoleum cutting belonged in the College of Fine Arts.
During the Depression, Wells served as the director of a summer art workshop in an old Harlem nightclub. His assistants included such famous artists as Charles Alston, Jacob Lawrence, Palmer Hayden and Georgette Seabrooke.
Wells retired from Howard University in 1968 but continued to paint and make prints into his eighties. Color linoleum prints became his specialty. In 1986, the Washington Project for the Arts assembled a major exhibition of his work, and in 1973, Fisk University mounted another one man show. His work Flight into Egypt was exhibited in 1990 in the Harmon’s "Against the Odds" exhibition. Wells died on January 20, 1993 at the age of ninety.






http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1988/2/88.02.02.x.html