MARY ANNE KEEL JENKINS (1929–2017). Mary Anne Keel Jenkins, born in 1929 in Stokes, North Carolina, rebelled against the genteel expectations placed upon mid-twentieth century Southern women. She... Read full biography
MARY ANNE KEEL JENKINS (1929–2017). Mary Anne Keel Jenkins, born in 1929 in Stokes, North Carolina, rebelled against the genteel expectations placed upon mid-twentieth century Southern women. She trained in, advocated for, and taught art, successfully keeping up with the trends of her... Read full biography
MARY ANNE KEEL JENKINS (1929–2017). Mary Anne Keel Jenkins, born in 1929 in Stokes, North Carolina, rebelled against the genteel expectations placed upon mid-twentieth century Southern women. She trained in, advocated for, and taught art, successfully keeping up with the trends of her contemporaries. Raised in Greenville, her father funded her painterly pursuits along with business classes. After one year at East Carolina University, she moved to Raleigh in 1951 to study at Ferree School of Art... Read full biography
MARY ANNE KEEL JENKINS (1929–2017). Mary Anne Keel Jenkins, born in 1929 in Stokes, North Carolina, rebelled against the genteel expectations placed upon mid-twentieth century Southern women. She trained in, advocated for, and taught art, successfully keeping up with the trends of her contemporaries. Raised in Greenville, her father funded her painterly pursuits along with business classes. After one year at East Carolina University, she moved to Raleigh in 1951 to study at Ferree School of Art for a BFA. When she graduated, she married Glenn G. Jenkins Jr., with whom she had two children, and worked at the Raleigh Times. In this early period, the works she made from her small studio above a shoe shop were realistic and often included... Read full biography
MARY ANNE KEEL JENKINS (1929–2017). Mary Anne Keel Jenkins, born in 1929 in Stokes, North Carolina, rebelled against the genteel expectations placed upon mid-twentieth century Southern women. She trained in, advocated for, and taught art, successfully keeping up with the trends of her contemporaries. Raised in Greenville, her father funded her painterly pursuits along with business classes. After one year at East Carolina University, she moved to Raleigh in 1951 to study at Ferree School of Art for a BFA. When she graduated, she married Glenn G. Jenkins Jr., with whom she had two children, and worked at the Raleigh Times. In this early period, the works she made from her small studio above a shoe shop were realistic and often included still lifes, portraits, and figure paintings. Jenkins’s art seemed to have four distinct eras, but she played with medium and style t... Read full biography
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