Artist

Frank Jones

born near Clarksville, TX ca. 1900-died Huntsville, TX 1969
Also known as
  • Frank Albert Jones
Born
Clarksville, Texas, United States
Died
Huntsville, Texas, United States
Biography

Frank Jones began to draw in 1964 while serving a life sentence for murder in the Texas State Penitentiary in Huntsville. (Jones maintained his innocence, but was incarcerated for most of his adult life.) His drawing materials were salvaged stubs of red and blue accountant's pencils and sheets of typing paper from the trash cans in the prison office where he worked. Later, as his drawings received favorable attention inside and outside the prison, he was given better paper and new colored pencils. Jones experimented with other colors, but preferred red and blue, which he said represented fire and smoke.

Jones, an African American, was born with a portion of fetal membrane over his left eye. In the African American tradition, as well as the traditions of other cultures as ancient as those of Greece and Rome, such a veil allows people to see spirits and devils. Jones first saw his "haints" (haunts or ghosts) and "devils" when he was nine and continued to see them throughout his life. He created several hundred complex drawings of houses that reveal these "haints" in cell like rooms. His horned "haints" characteristically assume physical attributes of animals and inanimate objects. Jones signed many of his works with his prison number until someone taught him to write his name, which he usually misspelled.

Lynda Roscoe Hartigan Made with Passion: The Hemphill Folk Art Collection in the National Museum of American Art (Washington, D.C. and London: National Museum of American Art with the Smithsonian Institution Press, 1990)

Works by this artist (6 items)

Eastman Johnson, The Lord Is My Shepherd, 1863, oil on fiberboard, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mrs. Francis P. Garvan, 1979.5.13
The Lord Is My Shepherd
Date1863
oil on fiberboard
On view
Eastman Johnson, The Girl I Left Behind Me, ca. 1872, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase made possible in part by Mrs. Alexander Hamilton Rice in memory of her husband and by Ralph Cross Johnson, 1986.79
The Girl I Left Behind Me
Dateca. 1872
oil on canvas
On view
Eastman Johnson, Walter Shirlaw, The Reprimand, ca. 1880, etching and chine-colle on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase, 1974.8.1
The Reprimand
Dateca. 1880
etching and chine-colle on paper
Not on view