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Douglas Flanders & Associates

5025 France Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN, 55410
612-920-3497
Fine Art Gallery & Consultants Since 1972

Gallery 612-920-3497 doug 612-791-1285

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Douglas Flanders & Associates

  • Artists of Spain
  • Services
  • Artists A – D
  • Artists E – H
  • Artists I – P
  • Artists Q – Z
  • Coming Exhibitions
  • 2020 – 2025
    • Todd Clercx + Chris Faust + Doug Johnson
    • George J Farrah + Kellie Rae Theiss + Holiday
    • Bruce Nygren + Flights of Fantasy
    • Dieterich Spahn + State Fair Rejects
    • SUMMER SHOW
    • Matt Moberg - North Country
    • Colorful Narratives
    • Holiday Hues
    • Lawrence Gipe: New Works from the Locomotive Series
    • Master Prints 2023
    • En Plein Air
    • Joyce Weinstein: Country FIelds
    • Juxtaposition
    • Feel the Warmth
    • Mary Lingen: Four Seasons
    • CELEBRATING 50 YEARS
    • Scott Lloyd Anderson – Oil Paintings
    • The Warehouse Show Part 2: Paintings+
    • The Warehouse Show Part 1: Master Prints
    • 2022 Valentine's Day Gift Guide
    • Hunt Slonem: Birds, Bunnies & Butterflies
    • New 22: George Halvorson Recent Paintings
    • Kim Matthews: Objects of Affection
    • Donna Bruni Recent Paintings
    • #streetart
    • April Showers Bring May Flowers
    • Photographs by Jack Spencer
    • Gift. Art.
    • Suzanne Howe: The Secret Life of Objects: Fall 2019
    • 12 Artists: Painting Minnesota / A Virtual Exhibit
  • 1972 – 2019
  • Catalogs
  • Team
  • Client Resources
  • Notable Sales
  • Open Call
  • Parade of Homes
  • News
  • Contact
5-Alma-Woodsey-Thomas-Iris-Tulips-Jonquils-and-Crocuses-1969-National-Museum-of-Women-in-the-Arts.jpg

Alma Thomas

Alma Woodsey Thomas
b. September 22, 1891 - d. February 24, 1978

Thomas was born in Columbus, Georgia, the oldest of four girls. In 1907, her family moved to Washington, D.C., seeking relief from the racial violence in the South. Though segregated, the nation’s capital still offered more opportunities for African Americans than most cities in those years.

As a girl, Thomas dreamed of being an architect and building bridges, but there were few women architects a century ago. Instead, she attended Howard University, becoming its first fine arts graduate in 1924. In 1924, Thomas began a 35-year career teaching art at a D.C. junior high school. She was devoted to her students and organized art clubs, lectures, and student exhibitions for them. Teaching allowed her to support herself while pursuing her own painting part time.

Thomas’s early art was realistic, though her Howard professor James V. Herring and peer Loïs Mailou Jones challenged her to experiment with abstraction. When she retired from teaching and was able to concentrate on art full time, Thomas finally developed her signature style.

She debuted her abstract work in an exhibition at Howard in 1966, at the age of 75. Thomas’ abstractions have been compared with Byzantine mosaics, the Pointillist technique of Georges Seurat, and the paintings of the Washington Color School, yet her work is quite distinctive.

Thomas became an important role model for women, African Americans, and older artists. She was the first African American woman to have a solo exhibition at New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art, and she exhibited her paintings at the White House three times.

The artworks picture here are not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

Alma Thomas

Alma Woodsey Thomas
b. September 22, 1891 - d. February 24, 1978

Thomas was born in Columbus, Georgia, the oldest of four girls. In 1907, her family moved to Washington, D.C., seeking relief from the racial violence in the South. Though segregated, the nation’s capital still offered more opportunities for African Americans than most cities in those years.

As a girl, Thomas dreamed of being an architect and building bridges, but there were few women architects a century ago. Instead, she attended Howard University, becoming its first fine arts graduate in 1924. In 1924, Thomas began a 35-year career teaching art at a D.C. junior high school. She was devoted to her students and organized art clubs, lectures, and student exhibitions for them. Teaching allowed her to support herself while pursuing her own painting part time.

Thomas’s early art was realistic, though her Howard professor James V. Herring and peer Loïs Mailou Jones challenged her to experiment with abstraction. When she retired from teaching and was able to concentrate on art full time, Thomas finally developed her signature style.

She debuted her abstract work in an exhibition at Howard in 1966, at the age of 75. Thomas’ abstractions have been compared with Byzantine mosaics, the Pointillist technique of Georges Seurat, and the paintings of the Washington Color School, yet her work is quite distinctive.

Thomas became an important role model for women, African Americans, and older artists. She was the first African American woman to have a solo exhibition at New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art, and she exhibited her paintings at the White House three times.

The artworks picture here are not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

Blast Off, 1970

Blast Off, 1970

Acrylic on canvas, 74 x 54 inches

Falling Leaves, Love Wind Orchestra, 1977

Falling Leaves, Love Wind Orchestra, 1977

Acrylic on canvas, 21 ½ × 27 ½ inches
This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

Lake Reflecting Advent of Spring, 1973

Lake Reflecting Advent of Spring, 1973

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

Starry Night and the Astronauts, 1972

Starry Night and the Astronauts, 1972

Acrylic on canvas, 60 × 53 inches
This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

   This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

This artwork is not in stock. Please inquire for information about additional works by Alma Thomas.

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DOUGLAS FLANDERS & ASSOCIATES LLC

5025 France Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55410
Tuesday – Saturday, 11am – 6pm
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612-791-1285 Doug Cell

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