Daisy Youngblood
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Daisy Youngblood (born 1945) is an American modern sculptor and ceramic artist. She grew up in North Carolina and currently lives in New Mexico. She was a 2003 recipient of a MacArthur Fellows Program "genius grant".
Youngblood's most well-known sculptural work comprises heads and torsos of people and animals made in low-fired clay, combined with found objects (sticks, teeth, hair). Some of the heads are explicitly representational portraits (such as her 1982 study of the art dealer Richard Bellamy).
Youngblood has given Jung and Buddhism as important theoretical influence, and has said that she is interested in "correlating worldwide religions and esoteric practices with the individual psyche."
[edit] See also
- low-fire pottery: earthenware and terra cotta
[edit] External links
- Review of her work from ArtForum, October 1999.
- Images of her work from the McKee Gallery (New York)
- Review of her work from the New York Times, May 1999.