People, Locations, Episodes

Fri, 11.03.19053

Lois M. Jones, Artist, and Educator born

Lois M. Jones

On this date, Lois Mailou Jones, a Black painter, and educator, was born in Boston in 1905.

Jones was raised by parents who supported her early talent and ambition. Her father was one of the first Black graduates of Boston's Suffolk Law School, and her mother was a hairdresser and talented milliner.  Jones studied art at the Boston High School of Practical Arts, the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts, and the Designers Art School of Boston.  Her family spent summers on Martha's Vineyard, where she painted watercolor sketches and enjoyed the encouragement of artists who summered there.

She moved to Sedalia, North Carolina, to establish an art department at the Palmer Memorial Institute, a Black preparatory school. Within two years, her students' exhibited work had attracted Howard University, which invited her to join the faculty in 1930.

In the early 1930s, Jones's art reflected the influences of African traditions. She designed African-style masks and 1938, painted "Les Fétiches," which depicts masks in five distinct ethnic styles. A sabbatical year in Paris in 1937-38 to study painting at the Julian Academy produced dozens of landscapes and figure studies. She painted outdoors, in the French tradition, rendering pastoral landscapes and street scenes, and contributed to Paris exhibitions.

Relishing the freedom from racial prejudice, she found in France; Jones summered there often. In 1953, Jones married the artist Louis Vergniaud Pierre-Noël of Haiti and met many of the nation's artists. From this time, she painted portraits and landscapes in brighter colors and with a more expressionistic style than she had previously employed. African influences reemerged in Jones's art in the late 1960s and early '70s, particularly after two extensive research tours of Africa.

Her paintings became bold and abstract, and African design elements dominated. A retrospective of her work toured the United States in the 1980s and '90s. Her works reflect a command of widely varied styles and an ability to incorporate many different influences.

Lois Jones died June 9, 1998, in Washington, D. C.

To be an Artist

Reference:

Encyclopedia.com

American Art.si.edu

A History of African American Artists from 1792 to present
by Romare Bearden & Harry Henderson
Copyright 1993 by Romare Bearden & Harry Henderson
Pantheon Books, NY
ISBN 0-394-57016-2

New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

O Africa, where I baked my bread In the streets at 15 through the San Francisco midnights… O Africa, whose San Francisco shouting-church on Geary Street and Webster saw a candle burning... O AFRICA, WHERE I BAKED MY BREAD by Lance Jeffers.
Read More