A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana - (Page 267)

ROLLAND HARVE GOLDEN b. 1931, New Orleans, Louisiana Lessons Lost, 2006 Acrylic on canvas; 40 x 44 in. Collection of Michael Sartisky, Ph.D. To Louisiana artist Rolland Harve Golden, the South has long been the metaphysical “heartbeat” of inspiration. He has traveled the back roads of Louisiana, the Mississippi Delta, Alabama, Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland. Throughout his long career, Golden has developed an almost spiritual reverence for landscapes and the stories of the people who inhabit the terrain. Golden and his work are the subject of three books—The World of Rolland Golden (1970), Rolland Golden: Journeys of a Southern Artist (2005), and Katrina: Days of Terror, Months of Anguish (2007). The Katrina book, which contained Golden’s paintings of the storm’s devastation in New Orleans, accompanied his one-artist show at the New Orleans Museum of Art. JRK ART IN CONTEMPORARY LOUISIANA 267 http://www.knowla.org/entry.php?rec=1187 http://www.knowla.org/entry.php?rec=1187

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana

A Unique Slant of Light: The Bicentennial History of Art in Louisiana

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