La Baker
Jones, Lois (1905-1998)
Item type:paintingDate of creation:1977Height:102.9 cm (40 1/2 in.)Width:143.5 cm (56 1/2 in.)Technique / Medium:acrylic and collage on canvasDescription
Commentary from museum website:
Working for more than seven decades and in a broad range of styles, Dr. Lois Mailou Jones enjoyed a remarkable career that drew inspiration from France, Haiti, and Africa, as well as her native New England. Born in Boston in 1905, Jones began her career at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, graduating in 1927 with a diploma in design. Her paintings reflect the areas in which she lived, traveled, and studied. Although Jones' experience of being a black artist in America extends from the Harlem Renaissance to the 'roots' movements of the 1980s, her art, according to Christine Temin of the Boston Globe (10/21/92), remained "more personal than political, more sophisticated and complex than propagandistic".
In La Baker, bold patterns and figures overlap and intertwine, creating a highly stylized work that unites form and color. The artist's affinity for abstraction and her African roots is evident in the canvas' rich colors and resolutely two-dimensional style. The title references Josephine Baker (1906-1975) who is known for being the first woman of African descent to star in a major motion picture, to integrate an American concert hall, and to become a world famous entertainer. She is also noted for her contributions to the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, and for being an inspiration to generations of African-American women.
People as subjects
Baker, Josephine (1906-1975) (Dancer)
Iconclass
61B2(JOSEPHINE BAKER)historical person (JOSEPHINE BAKER)
43C9dancing
43C912woman dancing alone
43C94group dancing
Image URLs
image link 1RIdIM record id
6055