Colorfield Weaving Project inspired by Alma Thomas
Man’s highest aspirations come from nature. A world without color would seem dead. Color is life. Light is the mother of color. Light reveals to us the spirit and living soul of the world through colors.
- Alma Thomas
grab the complete ALMA THOMAS COLORFIELD WEAVING project PDF + Printable pack here:
The complete project plan for the Alma Thomas inspired Colorfield Weaving project.
Artists will be introduced to the work of Black Colorfield artist Alma Thomas. This 5-page project plan includes “about the artist” pages, material suggestions, and lesson prompts.
Upon receipt of the email providing the download link, please make sure to save the PDF to your computer as the link expires in 24 hours.
** Please note that this project + template pack is for personal/individual/non-commercial use
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Inspired by the moon landing in 1969, Alma Thomas began her second major theme of paintings. The series Space, Snoopy and Earth.
Alma Thomas was born in Columbus, Georgia in 1891. She was the oldest of four girls, her mother was a dressmaker and her father was a business man. Her family relocated to Washington DC in 1907 to escape the racial violence of the South. As a child she dreamed of being an architect or an engineer but the harsh reality of social and racial barriers caused her to change her aspirations, and set out on a path to become an artist. Alma would become the first Fine Arts Graduate from Howard University. After graduating, she landed a job as an art teacher at a nearby Junior High School. Teaching allowed Alma to make a living while she pursued life as an artist in her spare time. Alma developed a signature painting style; thumb-sized rectangle brush strokes painted on top of large blocks of color. She painted with acrylic because she was able to achieve soft fluidity, similar to what she also loved about watercolor.
After 35 years of teaching, Alma retired to pursue art as a full-time career. She got her first taste of success in the art world at age 75, showing her work in a 1966 exhibition at Howard University. Six years later, she became the first African American woman to have a solo exhibition at New York’s Whitney Museum at the age of 81.
In her lifetime, she watched the Wright brothers fly, lived through both world wars, the Great Depression, the civil rights movement, and witnessed man land on the moon. Space exploration was a major inspiration for Alma..
I was born at the end of the 19th century, horse-and-buggy days, and experienced the phenomenal changes of the 20th century machine and space age, today not only can our great scientists send astronauts to and from the moon to photograph it's surface and bring back samples of rocks and other materials, but through the medium of color television all can actually see and experience the thrill of these adventures. These phenomena set my creativity in motion.