Oliver Lee Jackson


Oliver Lee Jackson is an American painter, sculptor, draftsman, printmaker, and educator. His art studio is in Oakland, California. He was a professor at the California State University, Sacramento from 1971 until 2002, and developed a curriculum for the Pan African Studies program at the school.

Early life and education

He was born in 1935 in St. Louis, Missouri, into an African American family. After graduating from Vashon High School, Jackson attended Illinois Wesleyan University. He served in the United States Army and was honorably discharged in 1961. He attended the University of Iowa.

Teaching

In the 1960s, he taught art classes at St. Louis local universities and colleges and remained active in this local community. He was director of program Uhuru at Pruitt and Igoe public housing in St. Louis in 1967 and 1968, a program to bring the low-income African American community a constructive means of developing dialogue through arts programs.
He taught at St. Louis Community College ; Southern Illinois University ; Washington University in St. Louis ; and Oberlin College. In 1971, he moved to California and joined the faculty at California State University, Sacramento, where he remained until 2002.

Art career

Jackson was affiliated with the multidisciplinary arts collective Black Artists Group in St. Louis through his close friendship with BAG co-founder Julius Hemphill, though he was not an official BAG member. BAG was founded by musicians, theater artists, dancers and visual artists as a support structure for creative expression among African American artists, and in order to have a greater place in the cultural landscape.
Jackson’s paintings are based in figural and gestural forms, and often expressionist in nature. There are a mixture of cultural references and iconography in his paintings including references to historical African art and European Modernism. Photographs of the Sharpeville massacre in March 1960 in South Africa became an inspiration for Jackson in the development of his figurative gestural forms, and resulted in his Sharpeville Series.
Jackson’s works are in the museum collections of the Museum of Modern Art; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Studio Museum in Harlem; the National Gallery of Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; San Jose Museum of Art; the Seattle Art Museum; and many other public collections.

Exhibitions

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