

Most
known for her vivid and passionate musicians, Jean
Mason's oil paintings depict
the energy and emotion spilling from the souls of blues and
jazz artists. Her new angel paintings depict compassion and pure love. Each painting has
hidden depths and layers of meaning. Her paintings,
regardless of subject matter, reflect a deeper human
connection.
Music
is the fuel that ignites her paintings. It's almost as
important as the canvas and the paint. Her work often
relates to words from songs, things she reads or stories she
hears. There are notes and scraps of paper pasted all
over her studio - paintings in the simmering stage, before
any brush stroke has appeared. She writes those
inspirations around the outside edges of the finished paintings.
There's
always more to the story.
She works quickly with intense focus. Jean usually works on
paintings in series or groupings, many times working on 30
or more canvases at a time. Time has no
meaning when the paint is flying. She's happiest when
she has a brush in each hand and paint in her hair.
Chaos equals creativity.
Her
paintings have captured the attention of the music industry
where they can be seen on CD covers, T-shirts, festival
posters, and billboards. She has
a following literally all
over the globe. Her work has been
referred to as collectable in articles coast to coast.
Ask
her where she’s from and she’ll tell you
"everywhere." She was born in Japan and
lived all over the United States. Her father was an Air
Force officer, which meant that her family moved every few
years. Her mother was an oil painter, showing work at
galleries in New Mexico and Colorado. As a child, Jean
remembers loving the smell of linseed oil and listening to
artists critique the work.
She
began formal art lessons at age 12. She showed work through
the private art school and made her first real sale before
she was officially a teenager. In high school and college
and she developed an interest in theater design, painting
huge backdrops for local theater companies. Jean
graduated from University of Kansas with degrees in
art and education.
Her
studio is in Carter Lake Iowa
- which is strangely enough, on the "wrong
side" of the river from the rest of Iowa (basically in
downtown Omaha). Being by the airport is a perfect place
for she and her husband who are now empty-nesters. Their
children live in Chicago and New York City.
Jean
is active in several
public school art programs including art appreciation for
parents and their children, and makes frequent appearances
as a Visiting Artist. She is involved in community
fundraisers, art awareness programs and public art projects.