Lois Mailou Jones had been a designer; taught art at Howard
University; and won prizes for her art in Boston, at Martha’s Vineyard, and in
Harlem and elsewhere before she went to Paris to study.
But her study and productivity in Paris, at the Académie Julian (1937 – 1938) helped her transition from being a designer and teacher exclusively to being a painter and artist.
Some of her paintings influenced by the impressionist school of painting were: Les Pommes Vertes; Chou-fleur et Citrouille, Paris; La Cuisine dans L’Atelier de l’Artiste, Paris; Rue Norvins, Montmartre, Paris; Dans le Jardin du Luxembourg, Pars; and Dejeuner, Place du Tertre, Montmartre.
But her study and productivity in Paris, at the Académie Julian (1937 – 1938) helped her transition from being a designer and teacher exclusively to being a painter and artist.
Some of her paintings influenced by the impressionist school of painting were: Les Pommes Vertes; Chou-fleur et Citrouille, Paris; La Cuisine dans L’Atelier de l’Artiste, Paris; Rue Norvins, Montmartre, Paris; Dans le Jardin du Luxembourg, Pars; and Dejeuner, Place du Tertre, Montmartre.
During that year in Paris she produced many
and various other paintings as well.
Once Mailou Jones finished her studies in Paris she
transitioned to being recognized for her own creations. She maintained a great relationship with Paris, returning many times through the years to paint and visit friends. She enjoyed a long and
illustrious career. Her paintings are on
display in galleries and museums all over the world.
The new Degas/ Cassatt exhibit at the National Gallery of
Art in Washington will be on display until next month, October 5th.
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