Alice Taylor Gafford was a nurse, teacher, and artist. Gafford worked as a nurse for twenty-five years before studying at the Otis Art Institute and embarking on her career as an artist in around 1935. Her notable works are of still life and landscape scenes. She earned a teaching certificate at UCLA in 1951, when she was sixty-five years old, and taught art in an adult education program. She stopped painting in 1975 due to cataracts. She was involved in founding the Los Angeles Negro Art Association, and the Eleven Associated Artists gallery (later Art West Association) in downtown Los Angeles. Studio portrait of Alice Taylor Gafford.
Type
image
Identifier
uclalsc_1889_b24_f05_005.tif ark:/21198/z1rr3ggh
Subject
African American painters Gafford, Alice Taylor, 1886-1981
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