Description
Born in Biloxi in 1903, she died there in 1993, living on the family property where she was raised. After graduating from Blue Mountain College in 1922, she moved to Chicago and became an actress, then moved to New York to act on stage and in silent movies. She married artist Archie Bonge in 1928 and lived in New York until they moved to Biloxi in 1934 with their child, Lyle.
Following Archie's premature death in 1936, she dedicated herself to working as an artist. Initially, she exhibited in New Orleans and Biloxi, then in New York, where she became affiliated with the famed Betty Parsons Gallery in 1946. There she was given a series of one-person exhibitions in the years from 1956 to 1975. Her art achieved national recognition through her shows at the Parsons Gallery, when New York replaced Paris as an international art center, and Abstract Expressionism became a leading influence in the art world.
Dusti Bonge, Art and Life explores the full range of her creativity, extending from her stage acting to her activities in painting, sculpting, printmaking, sewing, writing, and poetry.
About the Author
J. Richard Gruber is director emeritus of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans. He also served as director of the Wichita Art Museum, director of the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, deputy director of the Morris Museum of Art and director of its Center for the Study of Southern Painting, and codirector of the Peter Joseph Gallery in New York.
J. Richard Gruber, PhD, is director emeritus of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans. He also served as director of the Wichita Art Museum, director of the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, deputy director of the Morris Museum of Art and director of its Center for the Study of Southern Painting, and codirector of the Peter Joseph Gallery in New York. He has written numerous books and essays about southern art and artists.
Book Information
ISBN 9780578476919
Author J. Richard Gruber
Format Hardback
Page Count 352
Imprint Manetti Shrem Museum
Publisher Manetti Shrem Museum