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Biography:
Mary Tilley Zeman
Self-Taught/Outsider Artist
Born in Jamaica(Queens), N.Y. October 1963
B.A. Journalism/Advertising
University of Georgia 1987
Almost 10 years ago, I began
to paint after I had brain surgery to remove a benign brain tumor from the right side of my brain. I was recovering from surgery, and out of the blue,
I called my mom and asked her to take me to buy some paint and brushes. This was the first time I ever painted in my life. While I was growing up, I was
never exposed to art and just didn’t know anything about it, though I had always wanted to learn more. I began painting on wood, paper, newspaper, anything
I could find, then I started to paint on canvas. When I went back to my job in television, people looked at my art on the walls of my cubicle, and some
people encouraged me to go further with it. I would work all day, then come home and paint at night, and looked forward to the time I would be painting.
In October of 2000, I decided to leave my job and make a go of being a full-time artist. Everyday, I learn something new about art,
and I love making art. The biggest compliment I can get is when adults look at my work and say, “that looks so childlike”. On the surface, my work seems
to be innocent and non-threatening, but if you look deeper, there are many times observations about everything, from life, death, religion, politics, pain,
childhood, just about everything. I never know what I’m going to paint, it just comes to me as I go. I love to write poetry, also, but don’t do it as much
as I used to.
My artistic influences are varied. I like the work of Picasso, Mary
Proctor, Eric Legge, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Howard
Finster, Andy
Warhol, Alice Neal, Harry Teague, & many
others. I think art is everywhere, sometimes we just have to see.
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