Jimmy Lee Sudduth (American/Alabama, 1910-2007)
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Description
† Jimmy Lee Sudduth
(American/Alabama, 1910-2007)
"Bicycle"
paint, sweet mud and mixed media on plywood
signed upper left.
Framed.
36" x 48", framed 37-3/4" x 49-1/2"
The self-taught African American artist Jimmy Lee Sudduth used pigments he gathered from nature and preferred painting with his fingers rather than brushes. Sudduth grew up on a farm in Cains Ridge with his adoptive parents, who worked as itinerant farm laborers. His mother was a practitioner of herbal medicine, who often brought him along as she gathered materials from the woods. These sojourns with his mother gave him inspiration to use resources from nature in his paintings. He favored using “sweet mud” for its color and texture which he created by adding sugar to mud.
Sudduth spent most of his life in and around his hometown of Fayette, working on farms, grist mill, lumber mill and as a gardener. His paintings reflect his personal experiences and memories of life in rural Alabama. Sudduth never learned to read or write but he could "draw” his name on his paintings.
Sudduth was included in the landmark exhibition "Passionate Visions of the American South: Self-Taught Artists from 1940 to the Present" organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art in 1994 and became their artist in residence.
(American/Alabama, 1910-2007)
"Bicycle"
paint, sweet mud and mixed media on plywood
signed upper left.
Framed.
36" x 48", framed 37-3/4" x 49-1/2"
The self-taught African American artist Jimmy Lee Sudduth used pigments he gathered from nature and preferred painting with his fingers rather than brushes. Sudduth grew up on a farm in Cains Ridge with his adoptive parents, who worked as itinerant farm laborers. His mother was a practitioner of herbal medicine, who often brought him along as she gathered materials from the woods. These sojourns with his mother gave him inspiration to use resources from nature in his paintings. He favored using “sweet mud” for its color and texture which he created by adding sugar to mud.
Sudduth spent most of his life in and around his hometown of Fayette, working on farms, grist mill, lumber mill and as a gardener. His paintings reflect his personal experiences and memories of life in rural Alabama. Sudduth never learned to read or write but he could "draw” his name on his paintings.
Sudduth was included in the landmark exhibition "Passionate Visions of the American South: Self-Taught Artists from 1940 to the Present" organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art in 1994 and became their artist in residence.
Condition
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Jimmy Lee Sudduth (American/Alabama, 1910-2007)
Estimate $1,000 - $1,500
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