George Andrews (1911–1996) was a self-taught artist commonly referred to as the "Dot Man". [1] He fathered ten children, including painter Benny Andrews and novelist Raymond Andrews. [2]
He was born in Plainview, Georgia, achieved a third grade education and worked as a sharecropper.
Andrews often used found objects such as rocks, shoes, purses, furniture, and occasionally canvases as surfaces for his colorful artworks. [3] In addition to his dot pattern, he featured text, animals and figurative motifs in his paintings. He died of a heart attack in 1996. [4] Andrews was acutely attentive to the inherent qualities of materials he used, and of how they creased, tore, or made marks. [5]
1990–1992 Folk: The Art of Benny and George Andrews. Multiple sites. [6]
1994 The Dot Man: George Andrews of Madison, Georgia. Morris Museum of Art. Augusta, Georgia.
2004 George Andrews: The Dot Man. Barbara Archer Gallery. Atlanta, Georgia.
George Andrews (1911–1996) was a self-taught artist commonly referred to as the "Dot Man". [1] He fathered ten children, including painter Benny Andrews and novelist Raymond Andrews. [2]
He was born in Plainview, Georgia, achieved a third grade education and worked as a sharecropper.
Andrews often used found objects such as rocks, shoes, purses, furniture, and occasionally canvases as surfaces for his colorful artworks. [3] In addition to his dot pattern, he featured text, animals and figurative motifs in his paintings. He died of a heart attack in 1996. [4] Andrews was acutely attentive to the inherent qualities of materials he used, and of how they creased, tore, or made marks. [5]
1990–1992 Folk: The Art of Benny and George Andrews. Multiple sites. [6]
1994 The Dot Man: George Andrews of Madison, Georgia. Morris Museum of Art. Augusta, Georgia.
2004 George Andrews: The Dot Man. Barbara Archer Gallery. Atlanta, Georgia.