29 January 2008

REMEMBERING JIMMIE LEE SUDDUTH...



Jimmy Lee Sudduth...

"A self-taught artist who began painting as a very small child, Mr. Sudduth was renowned for the effects he could produce with his own handmade paint, which consisted of mud blended with a variety of common substances including sugar, honey, Dr. Pepper, coffee grounds, plants, sand and soot. Mr. Sudduth called the mixture “sweet mud." Applied and worked with his fingers, the mud assumed contour, line and form. Painted on materials he could find such as scrap lumber, sheet metal and most commonly plywood, Mr. Sudduth’s art often depicted everyday life in Alabama––portraits of houses, farm animals, churches, people, his dog Toto and himself. It also included paintings of far away places such as Washington landmarks and New York City skyscrapers. His art is in the permanent collections of The Museum of American Folk Art in New York, The Smithsonian Institution, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. His works are also featured in “The Life and Art of Jimmy Lee Sudduth” (Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, 2005). A prolific artist who could finish half-dozen pictures or more in a day, Mr. Sudduth was once asked why he never used a paintbrush. “I paint with my finger’ cause that’s why I got it, and the brush don’t wear out,” he said quoted in a catalog of one of his exhibitions. “When I die, the brush dies.” Mr. Sudduth died on September 2, 2007 at the age of 97. His artwork lives on in famous museums and art collections around the world."

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