Mavis Iona Pusey was a Jamaican-born American abstract artist. She was a printmaker and painter who was well known for her hard-edge, nonrepresentational images. Pusey drew inspirations from urban construction. She was a leading abstractionist and made works inspired by the constantly changing landscape.
Biography
Pusey was born on September 17, 1928, in Retreat, Jamaica, Her parents died when she was born. At the age of 9, Pusey learned how to sew and make dresses from her aunt. Her first job was at a clothing factory in Kingston. At 18, Pusey moved to New York to pursue a fashion design degree at Traphagen School of Fashion in New York. After a couple of years of Financial difficulties Pusey left school and worked at a bridal boutique. She then enrolled in Fine art courses at the Art Students League of New York, an institution that worked with her work schedule and allowed her to financially support herself. At this institution Pusey earned a scholarship from the Ford Foundation and was allowed to take courses and study under artists like artists Harry Sternberg and Will Barnet, a painter and printmaker. By studying under Barnet, Pusey was introduced to the world of Modern Art and was pushed to continue her work in painting. After four years of study at the League, when her student visa expired, Pusey moved to England to live with her two brothers in London and continued her education.
in 2011, Pusey was in declining health and was under the guardianship of the Orange County Department of Social Services. She died on April 20, 2019 in Falmouth, Virginia, at the age of 90. Pusey is survived by Yvonne Palmer. Her works still live on in numerous collections throughout the United States.
Artistic development and influences
Pusey drew a lot of her inspiration from the constantly changing landscape of urban construction. A lot of her works were inspired by scenes of urban demolition and construction in the city. She gave her works titles like "Broken Construction at Dusk" and "Demolishment". Pusey had a great interest in design that led to her use of geometric lines and works like, Solitude, a work she created in 1963. She had her first solo exhibition at Gallarie Louis Soulanges in 1968. In 1971, her work, Dejygea, was featured in an exhibition titled Contemporary Black Artists in America at the Whitney Museum of American Art. this same work has been featured in a 2017 exhibit, Magnetic Fields: Expanding American Abstraction, the 1960s to today, at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art. It traveled to places like Washington DC's National Museum of Women in the Arts to the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg, Florida. Pusey says that color sets the "tempo" of her work, while the design is the "backbone" of her work.
Collections
Mavis Pusey has works in many different collections in museums across the United States, Including: