Stacy Lynn Waddell

Last updated
Stacy Lynn Waddell
Born1966 (age 5758)
Washington, DC
NationalityAmerican
Known forPainting
Website stacylynnwaddell.com

Stacy Lynn Waddell (born 1966 Washington, DC) is an American artist. [1]

Contents

Education

She attended North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. [2]

Awards and recognition

She was a finalist for the Factor Prize for Southern Art in 2008, [3] and a recipient of a Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Grant in 2010. [4]

Exhibitions (selection)

In 2016-17, Waddell contributed work to the exhibition Southern Accent: Seeking the American South in Contemporary Art, which began at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, and traveled to the Speed Art Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. [5] [6] Waddell was included in the 2019 traveling exhibition Young, Gifted, and Black: The Lumpkin-Boccuzzi Family Collection of Contemporary Art. [7] In 2023, Waddell's work was featured in the Spirit in the Land exhibition and accompanying catalog organized by the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. The show is traveling to the Pérez Art Museum Miami, Florida, in 2024. [8] [9] [10]

Collections

Her work is in the collection of the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York. [11]

Related Research Articles

Marie Watt is a contemporary artist living and working in Portland, Oregon. Enrolled in the Seneca Nation of Indians, Watt has created work primarily with textile arts and community collaboration centered on diverse Native American themes.

Rina Banerjee is an Indian-American artist and sculptor. She currently lives and works in New York City. Her ambitious mid-career survey exhibition, Make Me a Summary of the World––co-organized by and exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the San Jose Museum of Art––opened in 2018 and is slated to travel to the Fowler Museum at UCLA, the Frist Art Museum in Nashville, TN, and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, NC through July 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barkley L. Hendricks</span> American painter

Barkley L. Hendricks was a contemporary American painter who made pioneering contributions to Black portraiture and conceptualism. While he worked in a variety of media and genres throughout his career, Hendricks' best known work took the form of life-sized painted oil portraits of Black Americans.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dario Robleto</span>

Dario Robleto is an American transdisciplinary artist, researcher, writer, and teacher. His research-driven practice results in intricately handcrafted objects that reflect his exploration of music, popular culture, science, war, and American history.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sonya Clark</span> American visual artist

Sonya Clark is an American artist of Afro-Caribbean heritage. Clark is a fiber artist known for using a variety of materials including human hair and combs to address race, culture, class, and history. Her beaded headdress assemblages and braided wig series of the late 1990s, which received critical acclaim, evoked African traditions of personal adornment and moved these common forms into the realm of personal and political expression. Although African art and her Caribbean background are important influences, Clark also builds on practices of assemblage and accumulation used by artists such as Betye Saar and David Hammons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terry Adkins</span> American artist

Terry Roger Adkins was an American artist. He was Professor of Fine Arts in the School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Andrea Chung</span> American artist (born 1978)

Andrea Chung is an American artist born in Newark, NJ and currently works in San Diego, CA. Her work focuses primarily on island nations in the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean sea; specifically on how outsiders perceive a fantastic reality in spaces deemed as “paradise”. In conjunction, she explores relationships between these cultures, migration, and labor - all within the context of colonial and postcolonial regimes. Her projects bring in conscientious elements of her own labor and incorporate materials significant to the cultures she studies. This can be seen in works such as, “Bato Disik”, displayed in 2013 at the Helmuth Projects, where the medium of sugar represents the legacy of sugar plantations and colonial regime.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Firelei Báez</span> Dominican / American visual artist (born 1981)

Firelei Báez is a Dominican Republic-born, New York City-based artist known for intricate works on paper and canvas, as well as large scale sculpture. Her art focuses on untold stories and unheard voices, using portraiture, landscape, and design to explore the Western canon.

Radcliffe Bailey was an American contemporary visual artist noted for mixed-media, paint, and sculpture works that explore African-American history. He was based in Atlanta, Georgia.

Meryl McMaster is a Canadian and Plains Cree photographer whose best-known work explores her Indigenous heritage. Based in Ottawa, McMaster frequently practices self-portraiture and portraiture to explore themes of First Nations peoples and cultural identity, and incorporates elements of performance and installation to preserve her mixed heritage and sites of cultural history in the Canadian landscape.

Jim Roche is an American contemporary artist, known for his "outsider art" chronicling Southern culture in sculptures, graphics, and performance art since the 1960s. His work, which often adopts the folk motifs of contemporary Southern culture, has occasioned descriptions as both "standing for the far right" and ... "confront[ing] hypocrisy and social injustice ... aligned [] with the downtrodden, disenfranchised and working class populations."

Maia Cruz Palileo is an interdisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Their work consists of paintings, drawings and sculptures, and explores their Filipino, American heritagethrough the examination of memory, family photographs, and oral histories.

Brenna Youngblood is an American artist based in Los Angeles who is known for creating photographic collages, sculpture, and paintings. Her work explores issues of African-American identity and representation.

Lauren Halsey is a contemporary American artist. Halsey uses architecture and installation art to demonstrate the realities of urban neighborhoods like South Central, Los Angeles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">María Berrío</span> Colombian artist

María Berrío is a Colombian-born visual artist working in Brooklyn, New York. The LA Times wrote that Berrío's large-scale collage works, "meticulously crafted from layers of Japanese paper, reflect on cross-cultural connections and global migration seen through the prism of her own history." She is known for her use of Japanese print paper, which she cuts and tears to create collages with details painted in with watercolour. Berrío, who spent her childhood in Colombia and moved to the US in her teens, draws from Colombian folklore and South American literature. In her interview with The Georgia Review in 2019, the artist discusses the tradition of aluna of the Kogi people in her work Aluna (2017). Berrío's collages are characterised by representations of mainly women, who often stare back at the viewer.

Caitlin Cherry is an African-American painter, sculptor, and educator.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Williams (painter)</span> Painter

Peter Beresford Williams was an American painter, educator, and social activist. His paintings have been described by writer and artist William Eckhardt Kohler as "in no particular order: hallucinogenic, acerbic, pained, beautiful, confessional, obsessive, critical, jarring, wild, weird, and profoundly human". In 2020, Williams received the Artists' Legacy Foundation Artist Award.

Antwaun Sargent is an American writer, editor and curator, living in New York City. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker and various art publications. Sargent is the author of The New Black Vanguard: Photography between Art and Fashion (Aperture) and the editor of Young, Gifted and Black: A New Generation of Artists (DAP). He has championed Black art and fashion by young Black photographers, and has built a youth culture around it. He is also a director at Gagosian Gallery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allison Janae Hamilton</span> American visual artist

Allison Janae Hamilton is a contemporary American artist who works in sculpture, installation, photography and film.

Tamika Galanis is a Black Bahamian multimedia artist and documentarian examining topics of Bahamian identity and culture, tourism, and archival histories.

References

  1. Sargent, Antwaun (2020). Young, gifted and Black : a new generation of artists : Lumpkin-Boccuzzi Family Collection of Contemporary Art. New York, NY: D.A.P. pp. 252–253. ISBN   9781942884590.
  2. "Stacy Lynn Waddell". NCMALearn. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  3. "Stacy Lynn Waddell". 1858 Prize. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  4. "Widening Circles: Stacy Lynn Waddell". Joan Mitchell Foundation. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  5. "Southern Accent: Seeking the American South in Contemporary Art". Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. Retrieved 2024-03-08.
  6. Schoonmaker, Trevor; Waddell, Stacy Lynn; Whetstone, Jeff (2016). "Southern Voices: "The Necessity of a Show Like This": Southern Accent in Conversation". Southern Cultures. 22 (4): 63–83. ISSN   1068-8218.
  7. Sargent, Antwaun (2020). Young, gifted and Black : a new generation of artists : Lumpkin-Boccuzzi Family Collection of Contemporary Art. New York, NY: D.A.P. pp. 198–199. ISBN   9781942884590.
  8. Schoonmaker, Trevor (2023). Spirit in the land: Exhibition, Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, 2023. Durham, North Carolina: Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. ISBN   978-0-938989-45-5.
  9. "Spirit in the Land". Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  10. "Spirit in the Land • Pérez Art Museum Miami". Pérez Art Museum Miami. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  11. "Stacy Lynn Waddell". The Studio Museum in Harlem. 10 September 2020. Retrieved 8 August 2021.

Further reading