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NEWS

Meet Sharon Mcconnell- Dickerson   a visually impaired, lecturer, teacher, and speaker..

12/4/2016

2 Comments

 
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​Sharon McConnell-Dickerson is an artist, lecturer, teacher, and speaker. Her work is featured in numerous exhibitions and included in museum, university, and private art collections. 

Originally from New England, she worked as a flight attendant and chef on corporate jets. In addition to heads of major corporations, she flew with such notables as George and Barbara Bush, Donald and Ivana Trump, Al Haig, Henry Kissinger, and others.

After working in the corporate world for seven years, a turn in her life took place at the age of twentyseven. She woke up in Chicago blind. She was eventually diagnosed with Uveitis, a degenerative eye disease. After several years of surgeries and treatments she became 
involved with sculpture. "Sculpture is the vehicle by which I access a lost sense," she says.

She moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1996 to study all aspects of art. Taking a traditional approach, she learned from teachers and mentors including Arlene Siegel, Robert Refvem, Sam Scott, Dean Ericson, Ulrich Franzen, and Agnes Martin. She also went to Paris, France. There with the assistance of the curators and education directors of the museums and galleries did intense 
hands on sculpture and art studies in premier galleries and museums.

After only ten months of study, she had produced a body of work consisting of eight bronze sculptures. Her earliest influence was Native American Blind Sculptor Michael Naranjo who showed her what was possible and rewarded her with her first solo exhibition at the Moxley, Ross, Naranjo Gallery. 

Her first life-sized work is reminiscent of French figurative sculptor Maillol. Her life-cast work is 
in the same tradition and methods of master life caster George Segal.

It is for her life-masks of legendary blues musicians that McConnell-Dickerson is best known. "I wanted to discover the faces behind the music I love, so I went to Mississippi to map out the visages of the real Delta Blues men and women." Her project took root and found a strong direction of its own, leading her to create masks of fifty-two musicians.

This body of work has been exhibited in the New Mexico State Capitol Rotunda, the Albuquerque Museum, Willie Dixon’s Blues Heaven Foundation in Chicago, Blind Faith Gallery in Clarksdale, Mississippi, The Blues Music Awards in Memphis; the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis; the Mississippi Arts Center in Jackson, Mississippi; the Tunica Museum in Tunica, Mississippi; Blues Passions Festival in Cognac, France, and at the Galerie le Clos d’Epicure in Cahors, France. It is currently touring with Exhibits USA-Mid-America Arts Alliance.

Another edition of 40 masks are also touring the U.S. She donated the original life-casts to the Delta State University Archives. 

Now almost totally blind, Sharon is seeking venues to exhibit her works, conducting lifecasting workshops, lectures, and demonstrations, and travelling. She is also painting large scale 
minimalist works in oil on linen.

​Sharon insists that all of her exhibits (with the exception of the 
originals) be fully accessible to people with disabilities, and are please touch exhibits.
Sharon moved to Mississippi in 2006, where she met her husband David. They, along 
with her guide-dog Avatar are residents of Como, Mississippi.

For more information aon her works go to ​http://mcconnelldickersonart.com/..
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2 Comments
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4/15/2018 20:20:11

nice

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write my essay paper link
5/12/2018 03:24:30

After reading the descriptions you have shared here about her, I was able to sum up all of the said descriptions here. For me, she is an inspiration. With all of her professions stated, being an inspiration is I think the most important. I know a lot of women who have the same kind of life and I do admire all of them. I would also like to become one simply because I want to make my life worth living. I am sure that these women also experienced a lot of hard times first before being able to achieve the things that they have right now. With this being said, I know that I might struggle now, but soon enough things will work on my favor.

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