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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Dr. Paul Jones, one of the nation’s
leading collectors of African American art, will speak at The University
of Alabama School of Law on Thursday,
Oct. 6 at 3 p.m. in the Moot Court Room (room 140).
Jones will be on the UA campus for the opening of an exhibit
of 42 works from his collection at the Sarah
Moody Gallery of Art in 103 Garland Hall. The exhibit, titled “Paul
R. Jones Collection: Looking Up,” will be on display from
Oct. 6-Nov. 20. There will be an opening night reception Oct. 6
from 6-8 p.m. at the gallery
Jones grew up in Bessemer. He graduated from Howard University
in Washington, D.C., then became a businessman in Birmingham and
later in Atlanta. He was heavily involved in the civil rights movement.
By 1965, Jones had moved into politics and was working for the
U.S. departments of Justice and Commerce. He spent a year in Thailand
as a deputy director of the Peace Corps. He was in charge of President
Nixon's national get-out-the-black-vote campaign in 1972 and was
subsequently an official in the Nixon education department. He
also ran unsuccessfully for Congress, as a Republican, in 1982.
The Paul R. Jones collection of modern African-American art is
one of the largest and most comprehensive, including more than
1,500 works by African-American artists such as James van der Zee,
Elizabeth Catlett, Charles White, Jacob Lawrence, Robert Colescott
and many others.
Jones bought his first art in the early 1960s. “Literally,
I started my collection by picking up three small prints, one each
of works by Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas and Chagall.” Jones says
he is interested in seeing his collection used as a means to weave
African-American art into the totality of American art.
Funding support for this exhibit has been provided by the diversity
committee in the College of
Arts and Sciences and the Office of the President. Funding
for the gallery is provided by UA’s art
department and College of Arts and Sciences. Gallery hours
are 9 a.m.- 4:3 0 p.m. weekdays, and 2-5 p.m. Sundays. Admission
to the gallery is free.
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