Vassar College Digital Library

Mary-Kay Lombino

Audio file
Access Control
Date
March 6, 2019
Abstract
Mary-Kay Lombino, Curator of Collections at the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College, talks about her exhibition Freehand: Drawings by Inez Nathaniel-Walker, on view February 1 - April 14 at the Center. Inez Nathaniel-Walker (1907–1990) made her first works of art while she was serving a sentence at a maximum-security prison for killing a man by whom she had been abused. While in prison she began to draw, creating remarkable portraits of her fellow inmates whom she called "bad girls." Her richly patterned works combine meticulous detail and playful simplicity, forming expressive depictions of her subjects' personalities and physical attributes. Freehand is Walker's first one-person museum exhibition. The exhibition is supported by the Friends of the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center Exhibition Fund and organized with the cooperation of the American Folk Art Museum, New York.
Creator
Note

African-American Studies, Art Galleries, Art History, Biography, Collection Development, Composition, Curatorship, Prisons, Textiles, Women in Art

Details
Member of
Identifier
vassar:76593,:
Extent
1 item
Type
Rights
These materials are made available for research and educational purposes. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine the copyright status of materials in the Vassar College Digital Library.