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Linda C. Dumas
"Making art is something I have always loved to do. When I was a
child,
there were no art
classes in my small school, but I adored attending Vacation Bible School at our Methodist Church, because
at crafts time you could "make stuff". I still am fascinated every time I enter my studio, grab a
piece of paper, a canvas, or a handful of clay, enter the right side of my brain, and, with my
hands, my pigments, my tools, transform those objects into something that speaks for me, to me,
and, I hope, to others. Sometimes the message is profound, sometimes a bit frivolous. It really
doesn't matter—art simply is, and I am an artist. That's good enough for me.
Linda Dumas was born in Alabama and reared in the
town of
Cottonwood. She attended Auburn University, where she majored in English and speech education.
She moved to the Houston area in 1964, and to Kingwood in 1977. After fielding award-winning
teams in speech, drama and debate in Kingwood for twelve years, she left the field and began to
involve herself heavily in art. “I’m only afraid there won’t be enough time left to do all the
art concepts and media that interest me,” she says. She has worked in many different media, and
continues to experiment constantly.
She first began studying oil painting in 1972. There were interruptions with different moves, but
she got back into classes whenever she could. Her latest oils workshop was with Cholla. She has
worked only slightly in water color, but was fortunate enough to take a workshop with Zoltan
Szabo. In 1990, she saw a community calendar with a listing for pottery classes, fell in love with
clay and studied it with Ann Lee, Linda Woodward, and later with Roy Hanscom at North Harris
Community College. She has even taken a stained-glass workshop, but found the form too exacting
for her more right-brain approach.
Linda’s initial interest in collage came about through a workshop given by Margaret Dobbins. She
has also done some collage work with Joan Marie Jackson. One recent interest came from a
creativity workshop with Veranne Graham, where she discovered the use of fluid acrylics on a
textured ground. She has been doing a lot of work with that lately, and having a ball. Veranne’s
advanced workshop proved even more interesting, and gave Linda much food for thought, leading her
to study for a time with the fabulous Mary Todd Beam and to do a great deal of mixed-media work.
She has done a workshop with Gerald Brommer, and her latest collage time was with Nita
Leland.
She has won many awards at local art guilds and leagues and at the regional Lone Star Art Guild
Competition. She has also done art demonstrations for a number of clubs. She has had work
accepted for exhibit at Kingwood College, Lake Jackson Center for the Arts and Sciences, and at
the Texas Sculpture Association show, as well as at festivals in Round Top, Destin, Kingwood, and
Conroe. She is a member of the Kingwood Art Society, the Lone Star Art Guild, the Visual Arts
Alliance, and the Texas Sculpture Association. Since 1998 has also been fortunate enough to be
able to serve as a judge on the Houston Rodeo and Livestock Show School Art Committee—something
she enjoys tremendously. In her fifth year, she was promoted to Steering Judge.
Linda shows her mixed media and ceramic pieces at Mason's on Main Street in OldTown Spring. She
has been with the gallery since its inception.
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