1 Caban
Red Magnetic Earth
Like frozen Field
Or brittle Fern
I fold into my Self –
Surface Life recedes
Falls far away and deep –
Sparks fly faint and blue
Too weak for Light or Heat
Frost rustles underfoot
Grasses bend and break
A Shroud upon myself I take –
Infinity curls within
My Shell –
Eros hides
Inside
Great granite Cliffs
Reveal a Planet full of Life -
Her Crystal Center
Pulls the Moon around
Directs the Season
And the Treason
Until the Sun returns.
©Kleomichele Leeds
Margo Humphrey's Last Supper
Margo Humphrey (born June 25, 1942) is an American print maker, illustrator and art teacher. She earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from Stanford after earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at the California College of Arts and Crafts in printmaking. She has traveled in Africa, Brazil, the Caribbean, and Europe and has taught in Fiji, Nigeria, Uganda, and the University of Maryland. As a print maker, she is known for her "bold, expressive use of color and freedom of form", creating works that are "engaging, exuberant and alive." Her techniques for layering colors are uncommon in lithography. Her work is considered to be "in the forefront of contemporary printmaking."
Career
External video
Margo Humphrey pt.1: Our Common Bond Artists Talk,
"I am Precious"
Myrtis Bedolla on YouTube, 9:37
Margo Humphrey pt.2: Our Common Bond Artists Talk,
"My mother planted all kinds of flowers"
Myrtis Bedolla on YouTube, 10:45
She was born in Oakland, California on June 25, 1942. She attended the Oakland Public Schools and graduated in 1960 from Oakland High School as an art major. After earning her BFA in Painting and Printmaking from the California College of Arts and Crafts, she attended Stanford University Graduate School earning a Masters of Fine Arts degree with Honors in Printmaking in 1974.
She began teaching in 1973 at the University of California Santa Cruz and has since taught at the University of Texas at San Antonio, the San Francisco Art Institute, and School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She has also taught at the University of the South Pacific at Suva, Fiji; Yaba Technological Institute of Fine Art, Ekoi Island, Nigeria; the University of Benin in Benin City, Nigeria; the Margaret Trowell School of Fine Art in Kampala, Uganda, and the Fine Art School of the National Gallery of Art, Harare, Zimbabwe. She is currently teaching in the University of Maryland in College Park.
Humphrey has worked in media such as lithography, monoprint, woodcut, etching and drawing. She is particularly respected for her work in lithography, a field which is highly technical and traditionally seen as male dominated. Many of her works are informed by the feminist art movement of the 1970's. Humphrey has worked with significant printmaking ateliers including the Rutgers Center for Innovative Print and Paper, the Bob Blackburn Printmaking Workshop and the Tamarind Institute in New Mexico. She was one of the earliest African-American woman artists to be recognized for lithographic works and the first to have her prints published by Tamarind, in 1974.
Her lithographs tell personal stories using a figurative style that combines autobiography with fantasy. Through a personal iconography of everyday objects, she illuminates her experiences as an African American woman. She developed her work The Last Bar-B-Que, a vividly colored transformation of the Last Supper, following a three-year period during which she examined portrayals by artists from Pietro Lorenzetti to Emil Nolde. The Last Bar-B-Que is considered one of American visual culture's iconic images.
She has also published a children's book, The River that gave gifts (1987).
Exhibitions
Humphrey's first solo exhibition occurred in 1965. Since then, Humphrey's works have been exhibited internationally, and are held in major institutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, The Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Hampton University Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro, and the National Gallery of Modern Art, Lagos. In 1996, she was invited to be part of the World Printmaking Survey at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, NY.
Her Story: Margo Humphrey Lithographs and Works on Paper (2011) at the Hampton University Museum, is a 45-year retrospective of her work, curated by Robert E. Steele and Adrienne L. Childs.
Awards and honors
Humphrey has received many awards and honors including:
The James D. Pheland Award from the World Print Council
National Endowment of the Arts Fellowships, 1988
Ford Foundation Fellowship, 1981
Tiffany Fellowships, 1988
Teaching Fellowships from the United States Information Agency Arts America Program*
CABAN
Kin 157: Red Magnetic Earth
I unify in order to evolve
Attracting synchronicity
I seal the matrix of navigation
With the magnetic tone of purpose
I am guided by my own power doubled.
Cosmic Science provides a key tool understanding and activating multidimensional paranormality.*
*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.
The Sacred Tzolk'in
Ajna Chakra (Gamma Plasma)
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