Sarah Jackson Net Worth

Sarah Jackson Net Worth is
$17 Million

Sarah Jackson Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Sarah Jeanette Jackson, née Sherman (Detroit, November 13, 1924 – Halifax, May 18, 2004) was a Canadian artist, who first became known for her sculptures and drawings and then became one of the pioneers of 20th century digital art. She was born in Detroit in 1924, the only daughter of Jewish emigrants from Poland. At Wayne State University in Detroit, she studied Humanities, receiving a BA and a MA degrees, her thesis being on color and texture in primitive and modern sculpture. She graduated in 1948 and left for Mexico City where she taught English at Mexico City College and began her life as an artist. In 1949, she passed through England to visit Henry Moore and then continued to Paris where Henri Pierre Roché (author of Jules and Jim) introduced her to Constantin Brâncu?i and arranged for her to exhibit a suspended sculpture at the 1949 Salon des Réalités Nouvelles. After her marriage with architect Anthony Jackson, the couple lived in London, where her first solo show took place at the Galerie Apollinaire in 1951. Over the next five years, she participated in various London group shows and in 1956 with her husband and the Italian painter Emilio Scanavino formed group four in the exhibition This is Tomorrow at the Whitechapel Art Gallery. That year the couple moved to Canada, where she continued to work in plaster and, later, wax and have her sculptures cast into bronze and exhibited in various galleries. In 1961, she created a large bronze Dancer for Cloverdale Mall in Toronto, a copy of which was purchased by Joseph H. Hirshhorn, who also bought other sculptures and drawings, which are now in the Hirshhorn Museum, in Washington, D.C. Jackson had been occasionally drawing and painting during the early 1950s, but from the latter part of the decade ink wash drawings became a major part of her work until the late 1980s. Her last bronze sculptures, three mythological figures, are in the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.In 1973, with the increasing cost of casting, Jackson turned to making sculptures out of everyday products and polyurethane foam. The following year, she started to explore the artistic possibilities of using current technology and was provided with a copier machine by Xerox Corporation, which subsequently donated some of her works to the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Appointed artist–in–residence at the Technical University of Nova Scotia (Dalhousie University) in 1978, Jackson taught art and technology classes. She also arranged international copy art festivals and mail art exhibitions, believing that this could lead to an ideal democratic interchange between artists and the public, without regard to political, economic or cultural barriers. Jackson documented these with published catalogues including the 1985 ‘’International Mail/Copier Art Exhibition’’ catalogue which received an award of excellence from the Art Museum Association of America. The assembled works were displayed both in London in 1987 and at the Canadian Museum of C

Date Of Birth1924-11-13
Died2004-05-18
ProfessionProducer, Miscellaneous Crew

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Linguini Incident1991producer
Legends in Concert1991Documentary producer
American Masters2016TV Series documentary executive producer - 1 episode
Hollywood Palms2001executive producer
Sin City Spectacular1998TV Series producer
The Pros & Cons of Breathing1993producer

Miscellaneous

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Disorderlies1987production secretary
Biggles: Adventures in Time1986consultant to producer

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
These Amazing Shadows2011Documentary special thanks
Do It Again2010Documentary thanks
The Good Girl2002special thanks

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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