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Martha Mood Wall Lights and Sconces

Martha Mood was a San Antonio, Texas artist, photographer and teacher, born in Oakland, California, on June 21, 1908, as the second of three children of August and Martha (Glaser) Wagele, both of whom had immigrated to California from Germany. In 1915, the family moved to San Rafael, California, where Martha attended parochial school and Dominican College High School. From 1926 to 1928, she studied art at the University of California at Berkeley, where she became familiar with Byzantine art and the work of Henri Matisse, both influential on her later work. She studied at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, from 1928–29 and subsequently returned to Berkeley, where she earned a bachelor's degree with honors, in 1931. She married John Homsy, on the day of her graduation, on May 16, 1931 and the couple moved to San Pedro, California, where they lived for nine years. During this period, Martha developed a toy business, after she began making wooden toys for her two daughters. She also began experimenting with photography and provided photographs for a book by Dorothy Baruch, Parents and Children Go to School (1939).

In 1940, the Homsys moved to Honolulu, Hawaii, where Martha was involved in the production of five photography books on Hawaii. In 1945, the Homsys got divorced and Martha returned to San Rafael with her daughters. After the war, she married Beaumont Mood, a Texas photographer who she had met in Hawaii and settled with him in Dallas. She began ceramics lessons in 1946, but her artistic activities were curtailed by an auto accident in 1947. She suffered serious injuries to her face and jaw that required extensive plastic surgery. In 1952, she and her husband moved to San Antonio, where she developed her métier as a stitchery artist. Initially, she worked as an art teacher in public schools and at the San Antonio Art Institute. After a successful collaboration with architect O'Neil Ford, she established a business, in which she produced lighting fixtures, fountains, pottery and other architectural design objects, with the help of her husband.

The Witte Museum mounted two solo exhibitions of Martha Mood's work during this period, featuring her photographs, in 1953 and her ceramic sculptures, in 1957. Her involvement with appliqué stitchery was prompted by the fortuitous gift of fabric samples from a designer friend, in 1959, at a time, when Mood was reading a book on the creative possibilities of stitchery. Her earliest work was quite simple, merely glued arrangements of fabric shapes that nevertheless demonstrated her mastery of composition with color. She later began to experiment with embroidery, which gave an extra dimension of color and texture to the surface of her appliqués. She used a mélange of found fabrics, such as denim, velvet, silk, lace, old blankets and used clothes in her wall hangings and amplified the textural richness of her embroidery, by using yarns of different width, braid and twine. Flowers, children, nudes and wild and domestic animals were frequent themes in her wall hangings. She also made ecclesiastical banners and abstract works inspired by Matisse's cut-outs and the cubist collages of Picasso and Braque. The Texas themes were reflected in her works, such as The Alamo (before 1968), Campfire (1963), Roundup (1965), Mexican Wedding (n.d.) and Hemisfair (1968).

San Antonio's Mexican-American community was an important source of color and design in her work. In her appliqué compositions, Mood used shallow space and expressively simplified form, both characteristic of modernism. She favored human subjects because "something beyond mere decoration is touched upon . . . deeper feelings and a sense of drama can be wonderfully achieved through the warmth and richness of the various fabrics." In Profile (1969), for example, she used lace, nylon hose, glittering mesh and printed fabrics for an evocative portrait of a Mexican-American woman. She was masterly in using color to create a mood. In Gwendolyn (1968), a study of a young girl reading, she established a quiet, reflective atmosphere through the use of muted greens, blues and lavenders, offset by the lightest accents of orange embroidery on the girl's lips and book. Except in a few works, Mood stayed with fairly simple stitches, such as the cross stitch, running stitch, and daisy stitch. The vigor and simplicity of her work was influential on subsequent stitchery artists.

Mood was one of the pioneers in elevating stitchery from craft to fine art. She traveled around the country to conduct workshops on stitchery and exhibited her work in more than 30 exhibitions in 17 cities. As her reputation grew, she was commissioned to make appliqués for clients, such as Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Baines Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Connally, Mr. and Mrs. O'Neil Ford and other prominent Texans. In 1966, the Moods were divorced and Martha Mood moved to Helotes, a suburb northwest of San Antonio, Texas. With the help of her daughter, Susan Bragstad, she designed a home, Qué Lástima and produced appliqué stitcheries with the help of a team of assistants. Post 1967, she was represented by Lester Kierstead Henderson, a Monterey, California art dealer, who paid her a salary in exchange for receiving most of her work. In 1967, Mood's appliqué stitcheries were exhibited at the Witte Museum and she received the San Antonio Art League's Artist of the Year award, she being the first worker in crafts to be so honored.

In 1968, Mood married Edgar Lehmann. She was diagnosed with cancer in late 1970 and died on July 15, 1972. With her permission, Henderson had many of her finest stitcheries reproduced in a more permanent and lucrative medium, large tapestries made by Guy Fino's Manufactura de Tapeçarias de Portalegre in Portugal. Her reputation continued to grow, after her death. The University of Texas medical school organized an exhibition of her work in 1972, and a memorial fund was established in her name, by the Fiber Designers of Texas. In 1975, in response to public interest in Mood's work, Henderson organized an exhibition of 38 Mood stitcheries and tapestries that traveled to a number of locations around the country, including the Rockford Arts and Science Center in Rockford, Illinois, the Charleston Art Gallery of Sunrise, Charleston, West Virginia, the Oklahoma Museum of Art, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, Wausau, Wisconsin and the Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas.

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Creator: Martha Mood
Martha and Beaumont Mood, Wall Lights, Painted Ceramic, USA, 1970s
By Martha Mood
Located in High Point, NC
A pair of sizeable hand-painted ceramic wall lights or sconce covers designed and produced by Martha and Beaumont Mood, San Antonio, Texas, USA, 1970s. One light has chip as illustr...
Category

1970s American Vintage Martha Mood Wall Lights and Sconces

Materials

Ceramic

Martha and Beaumont Mood, Wall Lights, Painted Ceramic, USA, 1970s
By Martha Mood
Located in High Point, NC
A pair of hand-painted ceramic wall lights or sconce covers designed and produced by Martha and Beaumont Mood, San Antonio, Texas, USA, 1970s. Ove...
Category

1970s American Post-Modern Vintage Martha Mood Wall Lights and Sconces

Materials

Ceramic

Martha and Beaumont Mood, Wall Lights, Painted Ceramic, USA, 1970s
By Martha Mood
Located in High Point, NC
A pair of hand-painted brown, beige and grey ceramic wall lights designed and produced by Martha and Beaumont Mood, San Antonio, Texas, USA, 1970s....
Category

1970s American Post-Modern Vintage Martha Mood Wall Lights and Sconces

Materials

Ceramic

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Martha Mood wall lights and sconces for sale on 1stDibs.

Martha Mood wall lights and sconces are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of ceramic and are designed with extraordinary care. Prices for Martha Mood wall lights and sconces can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $4,500 and can go as high as $4,900, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $4,600.

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