Lamar Dodd Collection Highlights Various Styles, Schools of Art
October 14, 2011
11-184
Jessica Pope
Communications and Media Relations Coordinator
Lamar Dodd Collection Highlights Various Styles, Schools of Art
VALDOSTA --Lamar Dodd was head of the University of Georgia’s
Art Department when he donated seven pieces of art in the late
1970s to what was then known as Valdosta State College. The
donation was the result of conversations he reportedly had with his
friend, Sidney Walter Martin, who served as president of VSC from
1966 to 1978.
With help from his daughter, Mary Irene Dodd, who was an art
professor at VSC (and Valdosta State University as it became known
in 1993) from 1967 to 2002, Dodd went on to donate the core of his
collection to the campus. He believed that “books and slides are
important, but when it comes to art, there is nothing to replace
the original. I think students should be exposed to the
best.”
Today, the Lamar Dodd Collection is housed on the first floor,
north side, of VSU’s Odum Library and features 20 paintings and
prints from a variety of significant 20th century and a few 19th
century artists, said Deborah S. Davis, certified archivist,
director of VSU Archives and Special Collections, and chairwoman of
the Library Art Committee.
“This is an interconnected collection featuring the works of
artists who knew each other and sometimes worked together,”
according to an Odum Library Blog post. “It is a very valuable
collection and contains examples of various schools and styles from
the 1920s through the 1970s.”
The Lamar Dodd Collection features works by artists from Great
Britain, France, Japan, Germany, and, of course, the United States.
Mary Irene Dodd painted two pieces in the collection, a watercolor
titled “Watery Surf, Tenants Harbor, Maine” and an oil and gold
leaf titled "Sunset Cove." She donated two of her father’s oil
paintings and one of his watercolor paintings to the university
collection.
The Lamar Dodd Collection is one of two full collections that
helped facilitate Art in Odum, an initiative that resulted in the
library becoming a destination promoting education through the
unexpected. The other is the Ross Rosenberg Collection of 15 very
big paintings and drawings, 15 very tiny drawings, and two
sculptures. Also hanging inside the Odum Library is Amalia Amaki’s
“For the Love of Books,” created in memory of William H. Mobley IV,
who supported the library through the donation of books over the
years, and four pieces from the Charles and Jeannette Kessler
Collection of East Asian Art.
On Friday, Oct. 28, the Odum Library will officially introduce the
VSU and South Georgia communities to Art in Odum. From 2 p.m. to 4
p.m., visitors can view the various exhibits, talk to some of the
artists, and learn more about the future of this ongoing project.
Refreshments will be served.
“The Dodd Collection is really amazing,” said Davis. “… Most of the
works are from artists with a strong connection to Georgia, either
they lived and worked in the state for their careers or they became
visiting professors at UGA … This is the most valuable collection
we own, and the works are really impressive. Our three by Lamar
Dodd alone are very special, from the signature piece ‘Still Life
With Magnolias,’ painted around the time he came to the University
of Georgia, to the highly abstract ‘Grand Canal, Reds.’ We are very
lucky to be able to permanently display artists of this
caliber.”
Born in 1909 in Fairburn, Lamar Dodd has been described as the most
influential Georgia artist of his generation. He began his artistic
training at LaGrange College at the age of 12. It was a women-only
campus at the time, but he struck a deal with the dean, art lessons
in exchange for coal shoveling and other chores. He studied at the
Georgia Institute of Technology before joining the Art Students
League of New York. In 1937, he was appointed to a faculty position
at UGA. It was a national effort to get more working artists into
universities, and he remained there until he retired as the head of
the Art Department in 1976. Memorializing his many accomplishments,
UGA later named the department the Lamar Dodd School of Art.
Dodd enjoyed painting scenes of his beloved Georgia, but as he
traveled, his subject matter occasionally changed. He studied
abroad and was even appointed a cultural emissary for the U.S.
State Department. In 1963, he was named the official artist on the
Mercury 9 project by NASA and also served as artist for many other
launchings, including Apollo 9. He was inspired by everything,
including his wife’s open-heart surgery in 1978. He died in
1996.
For more information about the Art in Odum initiative, contact
Deborah S. Davis, certified archivist, director of VSU Archives and
Special Collections, and chairwoman of the Library Art Committee,
at (229) 259-7756 or dsdavis@valdosta.edu, or visit
www.valdosta.edu/news/releases/odumart.101011.
NOTE: The Office of Communications plans to release additional
information about the remaining collections in the coming
days.
Newsroom
- Office of Communications Powell Hall West, Suite 1120
-
Mailing Address
1500 N. Patterson St.
Valdosta, GA 31698 - General VSU Information
- Phone: 229.333.5800
- Office of Communications
- Phone: 229.333.2163
- Phone: 229.333.5983