Varnette Honeywood

Varnette Honeywood
Born Varnette Patricia Honeywood
December 27, 1950
Los Angeles
Died September 12, 2010
Los Angeles
Nationality American
Education studied at Chouinard Art Institute; Art degree from Spelman College
Known for Painter, writer, businesswoman

Varnette Patricia Honeywood (December 27, 1950 – September 12, 2010) was an American painter, writer, and businesswoman whose paintings and collages depicting African American life hung on walls in interior settings for The Cosby Show after Camille and Bill Cosby had seen her art and started collecting some of her works. Her paintings also appeared on television on the Cosby Show spin-off A Different World, as well as on the TV series Amen and 227.[1][2]

Early years

Honeywood was born on December 27, 1950, in Los Angeles, where she studied art as a teenager at the Chouinard Art Institute. Her parents, Stepney and Lovie Honeywood, were elementary school teachers who had come to California from Louisiana and Mississippi.[3] Honeywood earned her undergraduate degree in Art in 1972 from Spelman College in Atlanta, the first historically black female school of higher education in the United States. (She would exhibit there in 1987.)[4] She earned her master's degree from the University of Southern California in 1974, where she majored in education.[2]

Career beginnings

As part of a community outreach program conducted by USC, Honeywood used her educational training to teach multicultural arts and crafts programs to minority children in the public schools.[3] Her work, influenced by such artists as Romare Bearden and Jacob Lawrence showed black Americans in everyday life, in family and social settings.[2] The time she spent visiting relatives in the South during her childhood, her college experience at Spelman and a 1977 trip to Nigeria all provided themes for her paintings.[3] She and her sister Stephanie established the greeting-card company Black Lifestyles with cards showing her brightly colored portraits depicting the daily life of African Americans, making it the first such company specializing in black themes.[2]

Hollywood art work

Camille Cosby discovered Honeywood's work on note cards and she and her husband Bill Cosby started collecting her works. This led to the inclusion of Honeywood's artwork, including her 1974 painting "Birthday", on the walls of the Huxtable living room on the set of The Cosby Show.[2] She had been asked to create a painting to be included for the show's pilot and different examples of her paintings were cycled through during the show's run.[3] She later created a mural as a backdrop for Cosby's television series Kids Say the Darndest Things, and her art appeared in the television series Amen, 227 and A Different World.[2] She worked together with Bill Cosby to create the characters and illustrations in the 12 books in the series, which became the basis for the Nick Jr. series Little Bill. Cosby credited Honeywood with the positive depictions of African American life in which "you can see teenagers doing homework, a family cooking a meal, girls doing their hair", rather than showing "segregation, starving and homelessness".[2]

She was featured in the film Varnette Honeywood : a study of a young artist, in the book Contemporary Black biography. : Volume 54 (2006).

Later life and legacy

Honeywood died at age 59 on September 12, 2010, in Los Angeles after fighting cancer for two years.[2] Her family started the Varnette P. Honeywood Foundation to support those who suffer from and are prone to having reproductive cancers.

Publications

As most of Honeywood's published work was for the Little Bill book series, those with asterisks (*) designate publications not from the series.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.