

Property from an Esteemed Maryland Collection
101
Alma Woodsey Thomas
Untitled
- Estimate
- $120,000 - 180,000
$120,650
Lot Details
acrylic on paper
signed and dated "A W Thomas '72" lower right
22 x 30 in. (55.9 x 76.2 cm)
Painted in 1972.
Specialist
Further Details
Full-Cataloguing
Provenance
Alma Woodsey Thomas
American | B. 1891 D. 1978A pioneer for African American and female artists alike, Alma Thomas developed a signature style that transcended categorization. Often associated with the Washington Color School, Thomas’ abstract painting practice references art historical movements spanning all the way from Byzantine mosaics to post-impressionist Pointillism to Abstract Expressionism.
As the first recipient of a fine arts degree from Howard University in 1924, followed by a 35 year-long tenure as a public school teacher in Washington, D.C., Thomas was an avid supporter of the arts. For the benefit of her students, she would invite leading African American artists and architects to present their work, as well as embark on many field trips to local galleries and institutions.Beginning in 1950, Thomas took courses in creative painting and color theory at American University, where she would hone her signature style. Many of her paintings created in the late 1950s and early 1960s featured active, gestural strokes with varying densities, in contrast to those of her contemporaries such as Morris Louis who favored more uniform, softer color fields. Thomas’ watercolors from this period were often inspired by the view outside of her kitchen window, which doubled as her studio. In 1960, Thomas exhibited a selection of these small-scale compositions at the Dupont Circle Gallery in her first solo show at age 69.