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Georgia Blizzard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Georgia Blizzard (May 7, 1919 – June 2, 2002) was an American ceramic artist from Virginia. She was self-taught and her work is in the permanent collections of several American art museums.

Georgia Blizzard
BornMay 7, 1919
DiedJune 2, 2002

Biography

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Blizzard was born in Saltville in 1919.[1] She claimed Apache and Irish ancestry.[2] When she was little, she and her family moved to Plum Creek.[2] Her mother taught Blizzard and her sister how to create art using a pit-fire method.[3] During the Great Depression, she left school in order to be part of the National Youth Administration.[4] She worked in a munitions factory in Bristol during World War II and after that, worked at a textile mill in Chilhowie until 1958.[5] Blizzard had contracted black lung and lost one of her lungs.[3] Her husband was crippled in an accident in a coal mine and eventually their marriage failed.[3] Her husband died in 1954.[2] Blizzard developed paranoid schizophrenia after these events and her art helped her deal with visions she saw and the feelings she needed to work through.[3]

She began making art for sale in the late 1950s and sold her pottery in her daughter, Mary's, store.[6] In the early 1980s, her neighbor, Michael Martin, contacted a friend to take some of Blizzard's work to a gallery in Buckhead run by Judith Alexander where Jonathan Williams discovered her work.[7]

Blizzard died in Glade Springs on June 2, 2002.[3]

Work

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Blizzard's pottery is hand-built.[6] She used to find the material to create her ceramic art in the creek behind her house in the Appalachian hills.[8] At first, she used a coal kiln built by her neighbor, Michael Martin, but later in life used an electric kiln.[2]

She is a self-taught artist.[9] Her art "expressed her memories, surroundings, and religious views."[4] The work is dark in terms of theme, as Jonathan Williams describes it, "they make you think twice about human despair."[5]

Her work is in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum,[1] the American Folk Art Museum,[10] the Milwaukee Art Museum,[11] the Asheville Art Museum, the High Museum and the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Museum.[3]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b "Georgia Blizzard". Smithsonian Museum of American Art. Retrieved March 12, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Williams 1993, p. 223.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Smeal, Meg (2013). "Blizzard, Georgia". In Crown, Carol; Rivers, Cheryl (eds.). The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Vol. 23, Folk Art. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 227–228. ISBN 9781469607993.
  4. ^ a b "Artist : Luce Foundation Center for American Art". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Williams 1993, p. 224.
  6. ^ a b Sellen, Betty-Carol (2016). Self-Taught, Outsider and Folk Art: A Guide to American Artists, Locations and Resources (Third ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-7864-7585-8.
  7. ^ Williams 1993, p. 222.
  8. ^ "Two New Exhibitions Opening at the Cleve Carney Art Gallery". Chicago Tribune. September 1, 2015. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  9. ^ Cubbs, Joanne; Hartigan, Lynda Roscoe (2001). Let It Shine: Self-taught Art From the T. Marshall Hahn Collection. Jackson, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi. p. 50. ISBN 1578063639.
  10. ^ "Mourning Urn". American Folk Art Museum. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  11. ^ "Blizzard, Georgia". Milwaukee Art Museum. Retrieved March 12, 2017.

Sources

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  • Williams, Jonathan (1993). "Seven Outsiders". Conjunctions (21): 213–248. JSTOR 24515462.
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