Joyce Wellman | |
---|---|
Born | 1949 (age 75–76) New York, NY, United States |
Alma mater | Bronx Community College, City College of New York, University of Massachusetts, Maryland Institute College of Art |
Style | Painting, printmaking |
Website | www |
Joyce Wellman is an American artist who specializes in painting and printmaking. Born in Brooklyn, she attended community college before earning a degree at the City College of New York. She would later earn two master's degree, one in education and one in art. She initially focused on printmaking but later turned her focus to painting. She briefly worked as a teacher before spending a few years on sabbatical. During that time, she worked on her art portfolio, receiving help from artists, including Valerie Maynard.
In 1981, Wellman moved to Washington, D.C., and still resides there. She became friends with local artists, including Sam Gilliam, who taught her various techniques to improve her painting. Since 1985, exhibitions have displayed Wellman's work at The Phillips Collection, Maryland Art Place, Kreeger Museum, and the National Museums of Kenya, among others. In a review of one of her exhibitions, Mark Jenkins from The Washington Post said Wellman's paintings are "dense with references" and "elaborately textured."
Joyce Wellman was born in 1949 in Brooklyn. She attended Bronx Community College before attending the City College of New York (CCNY), where she earned a bachelor's degree in 1972. [1] [2] She had been inspired to attend CCNY after a friend told her "Black kids in New York City public schools need more strong black role models!", so Wellman decided to become a teacher, "one of the most constructive forms of activism" according to her. Unfortunately for Wellman, there were no teaching positions available. After speaking with her father, a public school employee, the principal asked her of her father's school, "Can you teach arts and crafts?" She replied yes and began teaching. [2] In 1974, Wellman's interest in art began with printmaking, and she worked at local printmaking studios. At the Studio Museum in Harlem she worked under artist Valerie Maynard. [1] Her first solo exhibition took place around this time, at the Cinque Gallery in New York City. [3]
A few years later, in 1977, Wellman earned her master's degree in education from the University of Massachusetts. She continued her education in the 1980s when she studied painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art. Describing her interest in art, Wellman said: "During the 1970s and early-1980s my concern was discovering a means by which to create an art vocabulary and grammar that included vibrant colors, cryptic marks, shapes and symbols that referenced mathematics, anthropomorphic forms and personal experiences and references to my growing up in a household where 'The numbers' were played. I was on a journey to create work in the printmaking medium that became vehicles by which the viewer could journey through contemplative space." [1] While studying under artists Krishna Reddy and Ed Clarke, her interest in painting began. [2]
In 1979, Wellman often visited Washington, D.C., where she worked in a printmaking shop and visited family members. She ended up moving to Washington, D.C., in 1981, where she worked with Percy Martin and other artists. [1] [2] While taking a four-year sabbatical, Wellman helped coordinate a "Fusion Arts" program where people of all ages could come and explore their artistic sides and meet musicians, dancers, and visual artists. [2] [4]
During the 1980s, Wellman continued her focus on painting, drawing, and mixed media. Wellman said she wanted to expand her artistic skills because "It has always been through abstraction that I have sought to express my feelings." [1] She worked as director of the Art Barn Association's Arts and the Aging Workshop Program, where people with dementia could express themselves via art. [2]
In 1985, Wellman's solo exhibition took place at the University of the District of Columbia (UDC). [5] The following year Wellman's work was featured in The International Review of African American Art, in an issue discussing printmaking, and participated in a group exhibition at the Washington Women's Arts Center alongside Sylvia Snowden and Denise Ward-Brown. [6] [7] The late 1980s is when she began focusing solely on painting, after spending a few years working on etching and graphic design. Her works sometimes included the letters S.O.S., which Wellman said represented "We all need each other." [2] [8] She participated in a group exhibition at the Washington Project for the Arts in 1989. [5]
In the following decade, Wellman was frequently featured in solo and group exhibitions and earned her master's in fine arts at the Maryland Institute College of Art. [5] [9] Places where her exhibitions took place include the Arlington Arts Center, the Anacostia Community Museum, the Howard University Gallery of Art, the Maryland Art Place, and the Rockville Arts Place, where her work was shown alongside photographer Linda Day Clark and Michael B. Platt. [5] [10] In 1992, she became the director of a UDC arts program when not working in her studio, where she was visited by Sam Gilliam and other artists. [2]
Around the same time, she began working on an exhibition for teenagers who lived in youth detention centers. Titled Expressions D.C, Wellman said the exhibition "offers an opportunity to view African American youth-at-risk in a new light. The exhibition allows us to view and experience their joy in spite of the pain they feel being separated from home and community." [11] In one review of a group exhibit featuring Wellman, a report for The Washington Post said Wellman's "abstract paintings feature multiple layers of paint, a palette of bright, luscious colors, and glossy surfaces." [12]
Wellman continued to have success with exhibitions in the 2000s at the Kenkeleba House in New York City, the National Museums of Kenya, Dillard University, North Carolina A&T State University, the New Door Creative Gallery in Baltimore, the University of Arkansas, and the U.S. embassy in Georgetown, Guyana. [5] Her solo exhibition at the Kenkeleba House in 2004 was reviewed by The New York Times . Journalist Grace Glueck wrote Wellman's "paintings, drawings and monotypes are lighthearted but mystical compositions in which layered geometric shapes and fragments interact on grounds of translucent color" and that her art "speaks a language we can't fathom, but there's substance to it." [13]
In a review of her exhibition at the New Door Creative Gallery, journalist Glenn McNatt wrote about Wellman's fascination with numbers: "What impressed Wellman as a youngster was the fervent belief on the part of many of her neighbors that the astronomical odds against winning could be beaten (or at least lowered significantly) by paying close attention to random sequences of digits encountered in daily life -- phone numbers, birthdays, license plates, the due dates on electricity bills and the like." [14]
In the 2010s, Wellman's group and solo exhibitions continued. Local museums that hosted exhibitions include the Kreeger Museum, the Heurich House Museum, and the Katzen Arts Center. Elsewhere, they took place at the Kenkeleba House, New Door Creative Gallery, the Erie Canal Museum, the Harmony Hall Arts Center in Baltimore, the State University of New York at Geneseo, and the Columbus Museum. [5] In a review in The Washington Post, Mark Jenkins called Wellman's works "dense with references" and noted how her paintings were "elaborately textured." [15]
Her first exhibition in the 2020s took place at the Foundry Gallery in Washington, D.C., and was an homage to Edward Clark, one of her many mentors throughout her life. [3] [16] Additional exhibitions took place at the Featherstone Center for the Arts in Massachusetts, The Phillips Collection, and the Georgia Museum of Art.
The Smithsonian American Art Museum is a museum in Washington, D.C., part of the Smithsonian Institution. Together with its branch museum, the Renwick Gallery, SAAM holds one of the world's largest and most inclusive collections of art, from the colonial period to the present, made in the United States. More than 7,000 artists are represented in the museum's collection. Most exhibitions are held in the museum's main building, the Old Patent Office Building, while craft-focused exhibitions are shown in the Renwick Gallery.
Julie Mehretu is an Ethiopian American contemporary visual artist, known for her multi-layered paintings of abstracted landscapes on a large scale. Her paintings, drawings, and prints depict the cumulative effects of urban sociopolitical changes.
Sam Gilliam was an American abstract painter, sculptor, and arts educator. Born in Mississippi, and raised in Kentucky, Gilliam spent his entire adult life in Washington, D.C., eventually being described as the "dean" of the city's arts community. Originally associated with the Washington Color School, a group of Washington-area artists that developed a form of abstract art from color field painting in the 1950s and 1960s, Gilliam moved beyond the group's core aesthetics of flat fields of color in the mid-60s by introducing both process and sculptural elements to his paintings.
Cecily Brown is a British painter. Her style displays the influence of a variety of contemporary painters, from Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon and Joan Mitchell, to Old Masters like Rubens, Poussin and Goya. Brown lives and works in New York.
Alma Woodsey Thomas was an African-American artist and teacher who lived and worked in Washington, D.C., and is now recognized as a major American painter of the 20th century. Thomas is best known for the "exuberant", colorful, abstract paintings that she created after her retirement from a 35-year career teaching art at Washington's Shaw Junior High School.
Doris Emrick Lee was an American painter known for her figurative painting and printmaking. She won the Logan Medal of the Arts from the Chicago Art Institute in 1935. She is known as one of the most successful female artists of the Depression era in the United States.
Anne Ryan (1889–1954) was an American Abstract Expressionist artist associated with the New York School. Her first contact with the New York City avant-garde came in 1941 when she joined the Atelier 17, a famous printmaking workshop that the British artist Stanley William Hayter had established in Paris in the 1930s and then brought to New York when France fell to the Nazis. The great turning point in Ryan's development occurred after the war, in 1948. She was 57 years old when she saw the collages of Kurt Schwitters at the Rose Fried Gallery, in New York City, in 1948. She right away dedicated herself to this newly discovered medium. Since Anne Ryan was a poet, according to Deborah Solomon, in Kurt Schwitters's collages “she recognized the visual equivalent of her sonnets – discrete images packed together in an extremely compressed space.” When six years later Ryan died, her work in this medium numbered over 400 pieces.
Mildred Jean Thompson was an American artist who worked in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture and photography. Critics have related her art to West African textiles and Islamic architecture; they have also cited German Expressionism, music and Thompson's readings in astronomy, spiritualism and metaphysics as important artistic influences. She also wrote and was an associate editor for the magazine Art Papers.
Emma Amos was a postmodern African-American painter and printmaker.
Joyce Kozloff is an American artist known for her paintings, murals, and public art installations. She was one of the original members of the Pattern and Decoration movement and an early artist in the 1970s feminist art movement, including as a founding member of the Heresies collective.
Momodou Ceesay is a Gambian visual artist and author.
Ellen Powell Tiberino (1937–1992) was an African American visual artist, who was figurative and expressionist in her pastels, oils, pencil drawings and sculptures. Her works were infused with the experiences and history of Black people, women in particular, whom she most often painted in dark and haunting hues. She was a prolific artist, working against time as she battled cancer for the last 14 years of her life.
Njideka Akunyili Crosby is a Nigerian-born visual artist working in Los Angeles, California. Through her art, Akunyili Crosby "negotiates the cultural terrain between her adopted home in America and her native Nigeria, creating collage and photo transfer-based paintings that expose the challenges of occupying these two worlds". In 2017, Akunyili Crosby was awarded the prestigious Genius Grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Walter Henry Williams Jr. (1920–1998) was an African American-born artist, painter, printmaker and ceramicist who became a Danish citizen later in his life. The subjects of his artwork evolved from urban street scenes straight out of his New York upbringing to the metaphorical images of rural Black children playing in fields of sunflowers, butterflies and shacks.
Joyce Reopel (1933–2019) was an American painter, draughtswoman and sculptor who worked in pencil, aquatint, silver- and goldpoint, and an array of old master media. A Boris Mirski Gallery veteran, from 1959 to 1966, she was known for her refined skills and virtuosity. She was also one of very few women in the early group of Boston artists that included fellow artist and husband Mel Zabarsky,, , ], and others who helped overcome Boston's conservative distaste for the avant-garde, occasionally female, and often Jewish artists later classified as Boston expressionists. Unique to New England, Boston Expressionism has had lasting local and national influence, and is now in its third generation.
Ann Graves Tanksley is an American artist. Her mediums are representational oils, watercolor and printmaking. One of her most noteworthy bodies of work is a collection based on the writings of African-American novelist and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston. The Hurston exhibition is a two hundred plus piece collection of monotypes and paintings. It toured the United States on and off from 1991 through 2010.
Samuel Joseph Brown Jr. (1907–1994) was a watercolorist, printmaker, and educator. He was the first African-American artist hired to produce work for the Public Works of Art Project, a precursor to the Work Progress Administration's Federal Art Project. Brown often depicted the lives of African Americans in his paintings. He worked primarily in watercolor and oils, and he produced portraits, landscapes and prints.
Barbara J. Bullock is an African American painter, collagist, printmaker, soft sculptor and arts instructor. Her works capture African motifs, African and African American culture, spirits, dancing and jazz in abstract and figural forms. She creates three-dimensional collages, portraits, altars and masks in vibrant colors, patterns and shapes. Bullock produces artworks in series with a common theme and style.
Cynthia Hawkins is a painter and sculptor. In February 2023, Hawkins was awarded the Helen Frankenthaler Award for Painting.
Mohammad Omer Khalil is a Sudanese-born artist living in New York City. Born in a neighborhood of Khartoum, Khalil later studied at the School of Fine and Applied Arts, where he taught after graduating. He moved to Italy to attend the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze where he studied painting, mosaics, painting frescos, and etching. He continued his studies in mosaics at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze in Florence and the Academy of Fine Arts in Ravenna. Khalil moved back to Sudan where he briefly taught. He migrated to the United States of America in 1967.