Name/Title
Lee SistersEntry/Object ID
2010.1.13Description
Lee Sisters is a drawing by Henry Speller which depicts three nude female figures, all with different color hair and skin tones. Most likely, Speller knew these women. Speller's women, in pencil and crayon on paper, take on an almost predatory feel in their stylized features and exhibit the almost obsessive care with which they are drawn.Artwork Details
Medium
Paper, pencil, crayonCollection
Southern Vernacular Art CollectionAcquisition
Accession
2010.1Source or Donor
Lou and Calynne HillAcquisition Method
GiftMade/Created
Artist Information
Artist
Speller, HenryRole
ArtistDate made
n.d.Dimensions
Height
18 inWidth
15-3/4 inInterpretative Labels
Label
Henry Speller (1900-1997)
Henry Speller grew up in rural Mississippi and worked for his family's sharecropping business until moving to Memphis, Tennessee, around 1940. Speller always had an affinity for drawing, but it wasn't until he retired in the mid-1960s that he was able to concentrate on his artwork full-time. He married Georgia Vergas in 1964, a woman who also enjoyed drawing, and the couple encouraged each other's passion for art. He is best known for his long-legged, fancily dressed women and men, often partially dressed in vivid colors and asymmetrical patterns. Speller almost exclusively drew on large pieces of paper with graphite pencil, colored pencils and crayon. Although he had a hard life, Speller never complained and took solace in his drawing. Toward the end of his life, Speller suffered from many health problems and died in 1997 in a Memphis nursing home.Created By
admin@catalogit.appCreate Date
October 2, 2009