Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

malaise

(269,040 posts)
Sun Apr 8, 2018, 03:53 PM Apr 2018

The great Jamaican sculptor Gene Pearson died two weeks ago


What I remember most about Gene Pearson is his smile and his magnificent masks.
How amazing that he had a major heart attack and died less than a day after his wife died
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/entertainment/20180318/gene-pearson-man-soil-remembered
<snip>
Gene Pearson, ceramicist and sculptor, who is renowned for his Afro-Centric Nubian heads.died yesterday afternoon at the University Hospital of the West Indies. He was transferred there from the Medical Associates Hospital yesterday. Pearson, who was bestowed National Honours a few years ago, died within a day of the death of his wife, Jacqueline Hussey-Pearson. In paying tribute Culture Minister Livia Grange said Pearson made a significant contribution to Jamaican art. "He was exceptional and his passing represents a great loss," she said. The couple had a son.

Gene shared his time between Jamaica and Northern California and he had many Jamaican and American collectors.

https://nationalgalleryofjamaica.wordpress.com/category/gene-pearson/

The National Gallery of Jamaica received the sad news of the passing of Master sculptor, ceramist and teacher Gene Hendricks Pearson O.D. on March 15.

Born in 1946 in Wood Hall St Catherine; Pearson was only 15 years old when he was was first introduced to the medium of clay at the Jamaica School of Art now the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts in 1960. He studied under Jamaica’s Master Potter Cecil Baugh with whom he developed a close relationship; Pearson recounted that “…[Baugh] was like a father to me and I was like the son he never have.” He was one of the first two students to graduate from the school with a Diploma in Ceramics in 1965 and subsequently went on to teach at his alma mater for almost eighteen years and also taught drawing and painting at Calabar and Vere Technical High Schools in the early 1970s.

After he stopped teaching at the School of Art he began dividing his time between Jamaica and Northern California working with the Potters Studio in Berkley. He used the facilities there to produce his larger sculptures and his bronze works and also conducted workshops at University of Berkley and participated in exhibitions in California. He was also known to be a keen cultural entrepreneur having opened an eponymous gallery in New Kingston where he sold his ceramic and sculptural works.

While he produced more conventional ceramics, such as vases and bowls, Pearson was best known for his sculptural work, especially his popular heads and masks which celebrated black beauty and dignity. Inspired by the arts of the ancient Nubia and Benin as well as Rastafari culture, the introverted monumentality of his sculptural works made them amongst the most distinctive and recognizable of the artists of his generation.

“I have always thought that my work speaks for me. I am not a man who does speak much. My work is very spiritual. All my powers come from God and nature and I execute them through clay…”

He worked extensively with local clays with varying properties and colours, sourced from locales such as Castleton, Trench Town and Clarendon. His ceramic work also showed the results of his constant experimentation with the ancient Japanese technique of Raku-style firing, of which he was an acknowledged master. The characteristic crackled surface of his Raku ware was used with great finesse in his sculptural forms and had become part of his signature style.

His work is represented in major Jamaican collections, such as the National Gallery of Jamaica, the Bank of Jamaica and the Hardingham Collection, as well as the private collections of international celebrities such as Stevie Wonder, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Diahann Carroll, and Alice Walker. His ceramic works have also served as official Jamaican gifts to Heads of States and other public figures including Leonid Brezhnev of the Soviet Union, Prime Minister Phan Van Dong of Vietnam, President Lopez Portillo of Mexico, President Nelson Mandela of South Africa, Roberta Flack, Maya Angelou and President Bill Clinton of the USA.

------------------------------
3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The great Jamaican sculptor Gene Pearson died two weeks ago (Original Post) malaise Apr 2018 OP
What a lovely smile! spanone Apr 2018 #1
His work is beautiful malaise Apr 2018 #2
His wife Jackie and her work - you'll love this malaise Apr 2018 #3
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»The great Jamaican sculpt...