Kool-Aid #236

U.S.A, 1997

38 x 25 in (97 x 64 cm)

ID #LJ-Z-236

A woman licks her lip in front of a pitcher of Kool-Aid she just whipped up. The pitcher even has the same face as the Kool-Aid man on the packet.

A native Georgian, Leonard Jones taught himself to paint when he was in high school. His works are greatly inspired by scenes from his childhood, images of rural living in the South including housewives, church-goers, and laborers. A folk artist who is often considered an outsider, Jones paints to capture candid daily life and the beauty found in the community around him.The use of scrap wood or tin roofing alludes to the buildings he grew up with, and he often incorporates these materials into the paintings themselves. The materials are covered in bold backgrounds of color, which Jones paints subjects over using his fingers or the handles of brushes, leaving a distinctly Leonard Jones work of art.

Artist: Leonard Jones

Material: Paint on metal

LJ-#236

250-500 african american art art brute beverage drink folk folk art folk artist georgia house kool-aid leonard jones original outsider paintings size-38x25 south sugar woman