About The Artist
Anne Kingdon, for whom color is the chief symbol of expression, was born in Jackson, Mississippi. The daughter of a pastor, brought up in a religious and cultured atmosphere, Kingdon found painting an uncomfortable combination of salvation and deprivation. Between 1982 and 1987, when she finally decided to become an artist, Kingdon had many unsuitable and unhappy romances and worked unsuccessfully as a waitress, a phone solicitor, and a university administrator, where she was dismissed for overzealousness.
The works of her early period are somber-toned, sharply lit, genre paintings of which the most famous is "I am not myself." (1984). In 1989 she went to join her brother, a missionary, in Paris. Here, she began to lighten her dark palette and to paint in the short brushstrokes of the Impressionists. Her nervous temperament made her a difficult companion and night-long discussions combined with painting all day undermined her health. She began to alternate between fits of madness and lucidity and was sent to an asylum outside Paris for treatment.
It can be argued that her finest works were produced in less than three years. During this time her technique grew more impassioned in brushstroke, in symbolic and intense color, in surface tension, and in the movement and vibration of form and line. Her fusion of form and content is powerfully dramatic, while at the same time imaginative and emotional. Balancing delicately on the caprice of emotional instability, she remains absorbed in painting as an effort to strengthen her struggle against madness. Her paintings have been described as an emotional journey successfully explaining the spiritual essence of what it means to be human.