词条 | Fay Jones (artist) |
释义 |
Jones's father, Robeson Bailey (1906-1972), taught writing and was an early faculty member of the Middlebury College's Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. Family friends in her childhood included Dorothy Parker, Robert Frost, Louis Untermeyer, John Ciardi, A. B. Guthrie and Wallace Stegner. However the family was not wealthy. For some years beginning in 1950, the family operated a small hotel in Williamsburg, Massachusetts, where Jones worked in the kitchen, as well as taking care of her younger siblings. In 1953, she graduated from high school and enrolled in the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD).[1] In 1956, she met RISD drawing instructor Robert C. Jones (b. 1930); they married the following year, and moved to Seattle in 1960, where Robert Jones became a member of the art faculty of the University of Washington. They had four children, born between 1958 and 1966. Fay was primarily a homemaker in those years, but managed to set aside some time to make artworks, mainly in small formats. She had her first exhibit in 1970 at the Francine Seders Gallery in Seattle. The following year, she and her husband bought a run-down house, originally "more a shack" according to Jones, north of Seattle in the Skagit Valley, which became their summer place for the next 25 years. Over time they fixed up the house and built a separate outbuilding with studio space.[1] Jones reputation as an artist grew. In the mid-1980s, she was selected, along with Roger Shimomura and Gene Gentry McMahon to design major murals for the Westlake Station of the new Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel. A 1996 retrospective organized by the Boise Art Museum[2] also showed at the Seattle Art Museum and at the Washington State University Museum of Art in Pullman, Washington.[1] She illustrated one card (Stasis) for the debut set of the soon-to-be-famous The Gathering trading card game as a favor for her nephew, the game's designer Richard Garfield.[3] In the mid-1990s the Joneses sold their Skagit place and a few years later bought a house in Guanajuato, Mexico, where their son Tom already lived as a symphony orchestra musician. In 2006, Jones and her husband had a joint show at the Casa Museo Gene Byron in Guanajuato; however, they sold their home there in 2009 and bought a live/work studio in Tieton, Washington, near Yakima; both Joneses are active with the Tieton-based print studio Goathead Press. They maintain a primary residence in West Seattle.[1] Awards
Notes1. ^1 2 3 4 Sheila Farr, Jones, Fay (b. 1936), HistoryLink essay No. 10129, 2012-06-10. Accessed online 2013-10-13 {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Jones, Fay}}2. ^Regina Hackett and Sondra Shulman, Fay Jones: A 20 Year Retrospective : Boise Art Museum August 31-October 27, 1996 (catalog), University of Washington Press (January 1997), {{ISBN|0295975881}}. 3. ^{{cite web |url=http://magic.wizards.com/en/articles/archive/making-magic/25-more-random-things-about-magic-2016-06-20 |title=25 More Random Things About Magic|last1=Rosewater |first1=Mark |date=June 20, 2016 |website=Magic the Gathering |publisher=Wizards of the Coast |access-date=2016-06-20}} 4. ^1 2 3 4 {{Cite web|url=http://www.laurarusso.com/artists/fay-jones|title=Fay Jones - Artists - Laura Russo Gallery {{!}} Portland {{!}} Oregon {{!}} Contemporary Art|website=www.laurarusso.com|access-date=2016-03-06}} 13 : 1936 births|Living people|20th-century American painters|21st-century American painters|American watercolorists|Artists from Boston|Artists from Washington (state)|Painters from Washington (state)|Artists from Seattle|20th-century American printmakers|American women painters|20th-century American women artists|21st-century American women artists |
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