Selma Waldman
born Kingsville, Texas, 1931; died Seattle, Washington, 2008
Waldman became a tireless social activist for peace, justice, and civil rights. She worked as an independent teacher offering drawing classes at the University of Washington and Free University in Seattle, as well as other local schools. She also published and illustrated a number of books focused on social justice issues including a series of eight small books of drawings and writings that documented colonial abuse in Kenya and life in South Africa under apartheid. She preferred to work in charcoal and pastel, finding the inherent fragility of both media to be a poignant undertone to her images of human abuses against each other. Her primary subject was the human body used in expressionistic ways to convey her messages. Because of her difficult subject matter, galleries were slow to exhibit her work until late in her career but regardless she created a large body of work. Her archives are in the University of Washington Special Collections and her artwork in private collections as well as public institutions internationally including the Jewish Museum in Berlin, the Terezin Ghetto Museum, Czech Republic, the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, and Dallas Museum of Art.
Artist's obituary
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/obituaries/selma-waldman-77-seattle-artist-better-known-in-germany/
[accessed October 2021]
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
- Kingsville
- Seattle
born New Haven, Connecticut, 1912; died New York, New York, 1998
born Atlantic City, New Jersey, 1917; died Seattle, Washington, 2000
born New York City, New York, 1911; died Portland, Oregon, 1991
born Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1919; died New York, New York, 2013
born Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, 1944