Marita Dingus Explained

Birth Date:1956
Alma Mater:Tyler School of Art at Temple University (BFA), San Jose State University (MFA)
Known For:Sculptures made from recycled and found objects, environmental artist
Style:Mixed Media
Awards:Irving and Yvonne Twining Humber Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement
Birth Place:Seattle
Nationality:American
Spouse:Preston Hampton

Marita Dingus (born 1956) is an African-American artist who works in multimedia, using found objects.[1]

Early life and education

Born in Seattle, Washington, in 1956, Dingus earned a BFA in 1980 from Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia, and an MFA at San Jose State University in 1985.[2]

She married Preston Hampton in 2012.[3]

Career

Early in her career Dingus was represented by Portland, Oregon's Fountain Gallery, which was helpful in getting her work out to a much wider audience.

Critical reception

Dingus' work has been favorably reviewed by critics. New York Times critic Ken Johnson noted Dingus is "a worthy lesser-known talent."[4] Tacoma News Tribune critic Rosemary Ponnekanti wrote, "Seattle artist Marita Dingus opens the Kittredge Gallery season with 'They Still Hold Us,' work that, through discarded and cast-off materials, references the persistence of cultural injustices that affect people of color."[5]

The Museum of Glass described Dingus' art from found objects: "Throughout her career, Dingus has chosen to make her creations with recycled materials, which adds an essential element to her already multi-layered and thought-provoking pieces. Exhibiting internationally and locally, Dingus’ work is a commentary on the slave trade, recycling, and the politics of poverty."[6]

Regina Hackett of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer said, "Seattle's Dingus is open-minded about what constitutes her material. Basically, it's whatever she lays her hands on and includes zippers, strips of cloth, light-bulb sockets, paper clips, tooth guards, paint brushes, bits of wire, computer innards, bent silverware, pacifiers, colored tape, paint, plastic and coarse thread."[7] Hackett added, "After two residencies at Pilchuck Glass School, she's making singular use of the medium. Some of her babies have glass faces with painted features, others have glass torsos also, fat and silky forms with an inherent sense of wiggle. It's a pleasure to walk into the room and feel these forms in active engagement around you."

Artist statement

“I consider myself an African-American Feminist and environmental artist. My approach to producing art is environmentally and politically infused: neither waste humanity nor the gifts of nature. I am primarily a mixed media sculptor who uses discarded materials. My art draws upon relics from the African Diaspora. The discarded materials represent how people of African descent were used during the institution of slavery and colonialism then discarded, but who found ways to repurpose themselves and thrive in a hostile world. I seek to use recovered materials, reconfiguring and incorporating them into pieces of art where possible and appropriate, and to mitigate waste and pollution in all my work. This is a creative challenge, but a commitment I incorporate into my professional and personal activities.”[8]

Awards

In 2018, Artist Trust announced Dingus as the recipient of the Irving and Yvonne Twining Humber Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement.[9] In 2017 she was named a Legacy Artist (Experimental Media) of the Museum of Northwest Art.[10] She was also honored in 2005 with the Morris and Joan Alhadeff PONCHO Artist of the Year award.[11] Earlier in her career, she received a Visual Art Fellowship from the Artist Trust in 1994, and a John S. Guggenheim Fellowship in 1999.[12]

Selected public artworks and collections

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kittredge Gallery Presents Artists Marita Dingus and Sarah Gilbert · Campus News · University of Puget Sound. www.pugetsound.edu. 2016-03-05.
  2. Web site: About Marita Dingus. 201. Seattle Art Museum. 1 February 2019.
  3. Web site: Washington, Marriage Index, 1969-2014. 17 December 2012. www.ancestry.com. 2019-03-15.
  4. News: Art in Review. Johnson. Ken. 1998-01-30. The New York Times. 2019-03-16. en-US. 0362-4331.
  5. Web site: Critic's Picks: Marita Dingus at Kittredge, book art at the Collins, downtown theater tours and quilts at American Art Company. thenewstribune. en. 2019-03-16.
  6. Web site: Creating Connections Curriculum: Marita Dingus, About Face. 2004. Museum of Glass. https://web.archive.org/web/20110429014205/https://www.museumofglass.org/document.doc?id=41. 29 April 2011. dead. 14 March 2019.
  7. Web site: Conceived of bits and pieces, Marita Dingus' babies are simply adorable. 2006-07-21. seattlepi.com. 2019-03-16.
  8. Web site: Marita Dingus at Traver Gallery. June 19, 2021. Traver Gallery.
  9. Web site: Artist Trust Announces Marita Dingus as the 2018 Irving and Yvonne Twining Humber Award Recipient. 29 May 2018. artisttrust.org. 2019-03-15.
  10. Web site: Sept. 13, 2017: MoNA Luminaries Artist Awards MoNA. www.monamuseum.org. 2019-03-15.
  11. Web site: A History: Creative Fusion Mentor Artists. Summer 2018. UCDS Schools. 2019-03-15.
  12. Web site: John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Marita Dingus. en-US. 2019-03-16.
  13. Web site: ArtsWA My Public Art Portal Artist Collection Marita Dingus. June 19, 2021. ArtsWA My Public Art Portal.
  14. Web site: Tacoma Art Museum emuseum - Online Collection. June 19, 2021. Tacoma Art Museum.
  15. Web site: Seattle Art Museum emuseum - Online Collections. June 19, 2021. Seattle Art Museum.
  16. Web site: Vulcan Real Estate Artwalk: "Winds of Change: We Are Still Here" by Marita Dingus & Preston Hampton. June 19, 2021. Vulcan Real Estate.
  17. Web site: The Art of Being: Feelings, Memories, and Imagination. June 19, 2021. Museum of Glass.
  18. Web site: Douglass-Truth Branch Art. June 19, 2021. Seattle Public Library.
  19. Web site: Five Women Artists: Marita Dingus. June 19, 2021. Whatcom Museum. March 24, 2020 .
  20. Web site: Recycled Child (2009) by Marita Dingus, located at Seattle Central College, Seattle, WA. June 19, 2021. ArtsWA, Washington's State Art Collection, www.arts.wa.gov/my-public-art-portal.