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Alma Thomas: The Colorful Work of a 20th-Century Black Female Abstract Artist
- Alma Thomas became the first Black woman to earn a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Howard University, marking a milestone in art education.
- Thomas taught in Washington, D.C. for 35 years while developing her own vibrant abstract style.
- Her mature work features bold colors and mosaic-like patterns, reflecting influences from cubism and tachiste painting.
- Thomas gained major recognition in the late 1960s and 1970s, including solo shows at prestigious institutions.
- Howard University organized a retrospective in 1966, encouraging Thomas to continue painting with renewed inspiration.
- The artist’s late-career ‘Earth’ and 'Space' series reflected light, geography, and space exploration themes.
- Thomas’ work is celebrated posthumously through exhibitions and continued discourse on color and equality in art.
- Thomas attributed the drive to color and beauty as a central purpose of her painting.
- Her early education and persistence helped bridge opportunities for women and people of color in art.
- Resurrection from Thomas’ Earth series was later added to a White House collection in 2014.
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