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Mildred Howard is an African-American artist known primarily for her sculptural installation and mixed-media assemblages. She is represented by Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco, California. Her work has been shown at galleries in Boston, Los Angeles, and New York; internationally at venues in Berlin, Cairo, London, Paris, and Venice. As well, at institutions including the Oakland Museum of California, the de Young Museum, SFMOMA, the San Jose Museum of Art and the Museum of the African Diaspora.
Art critic Kenneth Baker of the San Francisco Chronicle describes Howard's practice as follows: “Mildred Howard takes full advantage of the latitude that modernism won for artists in the use of materials and expressive idioms. She has used photographs, glass, architecture, housewares and other found objects of all kinds. Because she maneuvers so freely within the conceptually soft borders of ‘installation’ work, people tend to think of her as a sculptor, but she prefers the vaguer, more open term artist.”
Art in America's Leah Ollman writes: “Howard […] has worked in assemblage, collage and installation for more than a decade, but her real medium is memory, which permeates her work with vitality and poignancy.”
Howard was born in 1945 in San Francisco, …
Mildred Howard is an African-American artist known primarily for her sculptural installation and mixed-media assemblages. She is represented by Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco, California. Her work has been shown at galleries in Boston, Los Angeles, and New York; internationally at venues in Berlin, Cairo, London, Paris, and Venice. As well, at institutions including the Oakland Museum of California, the de Young Museum, SFMOMA, the San Jose Museum of Art and the Museum of the African Diaspora.
Art critic Kenneth Baker of the San Francisco Chronicle describes Howard's practice as follows: “Mildred Howard takes full advantage of the latitude that modernism won for artists in the use of materials and expressive idioms. She has used photographs, glass, architecture, housewares and other found objects of all kinds. Because she maneuvers so freely within the conceptually soft borders of ‘installation’ work, people tend to think of her as a sculptor, but she prefers the vaguer, more open term artist.”
Art in America's Leah Ollman writes: “Howard […] has worked in assemblage, collage and installation for more than a decade, but her real medium is memory, which permeates her work with vitality and poignancy.”
Howard was born in 1945 in San Francisco, California and raised in Berkeley, California. She received an Associate of Arts Degree and Certificate in Fashion Arts from the College of Alameda in 1977 and an MFA in 1985 from the Fiberworks Center from the Textile Arts at John F. Kennedy University. Howard's parents had an antiques business and were politically active in labor unions, civil rights struggles and other community issues. Howard has lived in Berkeley since 1949. She was a member of S.N.C.C. and C.O.R.E. and participated as a youth in protests against segregation in Berkeley schools.
Howard began her adult creative life as a dancer before working in visual art. In the early 1980s, Howard's installations took the form of manipulated windows from storefronts and churches. They later evolved into constructed habitats that provided walk-in environments. For example, in 1990 Howard created a house made of engraved bottles and sand in the atrium of the Afro-American Museum in Los Angeles; this work was inspired by the book Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man by James Weldon Johnson, and makes visual reference to the bottle houses Johnson describes in the book. In 2005, she fabricated and installed a house made of red glass at the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, Washington.
Howard has created numerous public installation works in the Bay Area, including Three Shades of Blue, a collaboration with poet Quincy Troupe on the Fillmore Street bridge, and The Music of Language on Glide Memorial’s family housing building on Mason Street, both in San Francisco.
Awards and honors:
In 1991, Howard received the Adaline Kent Award from the San Francisco Art Institute for her installation Ten Little Children (one got shot and then there were nine), a work representing a cemetery inspired by the Soweto massacre. She has been the recipient of two Rockefeller Fellowships to Bellagio, Italy (1996 and 2007); the Joan Mitchell Award; an NEA Fellowship in Sculpture; and the Flintridge Foundation Award for Visual Art.
In 2011, Howard was honored at Berkeley City Hall Chambers where Berkeley mayor Tom Bates officially declared Tuesday, March 29, 2011 to be Mildred Howard Day. In 2012, Howard received a SPUR Award, described as San Francisco's "largest and most prominent annual civic award," from the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research.
Courtesy of the Oxbow School.
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA
Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT
Washington State Arts Commission, Olympia, WA
Escuela de Artes Plasticas, Managua, Nicaragua
De Young Museum, San Francisco, CA
Hampton University, Hampton, CA
International Museum of Glass & Contemporary Art, Tacoma, WA
Kaiser Permanente Corporation, CA
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, CA
Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco, CA
Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA
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