
Jean Jones Jackson
Jean Jones Jackson (1907-1984) was an American Surrealist painter. After studies in Paris and at the Art Students League, she started drawing in 1947 and then painting in 1950. In the 1950s, she would have New York solo exhibitions at Hugo Gallery and Maynard Walker Gallery and eventually, in 1968, landed a solo exhibition at the famed Betty Parsons Gallery. Writing to Jean in January 1968, dealer and artist Betty Parsons remarks, “We had a very good time showing your paintings. Everybody, including the artists in the Gallery, were very enthusiastic about them. We sold eleven which I think is very good for a first show and I expect to sell the rest of them before summer.” Despite Jackson’s modest commercial success, positive critical reviews (including one in Time magazine in 1969) and placement in prominent art collections of the era (including those of Paul Mellon and the Metropolitan Museum of Art), her work struggled to gain the kind traction that other star members of Parsons’ stable easily did.
For much of her career, Jackson lived half the year in a barn on the river side of Newtown Turnpike in Weston, Connecticut which her patron Alice DeLamar turned into apartment units. Her dashing blue-eyed sailor husband, Sandy, was 20 years her junior and mostly lived in the Forge, a red antique building perched right on the edge of the road adjacent to Alice DeLamar’s CT estate. Like Dudley Huppler, many winters were spent with DeLamar at the South Ocean Boulevard estate in Palm Beach, a home which originally belonged to the American Modernist painter, Gerald Murphy. The spirit and atmosphere of her surroundings in both Connecticut and Florida would make their way into many paintings.
In Jackson’s copious letters in DeLamar she spoke mostly of the woods, Sandy’s “Hill Billy” friends, plants, flowers, trees and animals. She talked a little about her painting and longed for places where she could be alone, remarking in the early-1980s that, “There doesn’t seem any place I can get to be a hermit.”
Jean Jones Jackson, Imaginary Walrus, 1964, oil on Masonite, 5 1/2 x 6 1/2 inches
Jean Jones Jackson, Untitled (Nativity), c. 1960s, 3 x 4 1/2 inches
Jean Jones Jackson, Baseball, c. 1960, ink on paper, 11 x 13 1/4 inches
Jean Jones Jackson, Southern Comfort, c. 1950s, gouache on card, 3 1/4 x 5 1/4 inches
Betty Parsons' Private Collection, exhibition catalogue for show organized Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield, MI, with texts by Elayne Varian and Eugene Goossen, 1968, 11 x 8 1/2 inches
Jean Jones Jackson postcard, c. 1960s, 4 x 6 inches
Jean Jones Jackson postcard, c. 1960s, 4 x 6 inches
John Bernard Myers and James Merrill, To Remember JJJ: Fourteen Drawings by Jean Jones Jackson, loose portfolio of reproductions on Rives paper and texts by Myers and Merrill, with linen covered clamshell box, Sea Cliff Editions, 1985, edition of 120, 10 x 13 inches
Collection of Miniature Works by Jean Jones Jackson (1907-1984): From the personal collection of Marguerite Riordan, Stonington, CT, catalogue published by Jeffrey Tillou, Lichtfield, CT, 2019, 8 1/2 x 11 inches
Jean Jones Jackson at home in the studio, Palm Beach, FL, n.d.. Courtesy of the Estate of Sandy Jackson.
Contact sheet of Jean Jones Jackson, Summer 1967. Photos by Emerick Bronson. Courtesy of the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., Betty Parsons Papers.
Apartment of Bettina Jones Bergery, 1 Rue Git Le Coeur, Paris, France, n.d.. Courtesy Nona Footz.
Jean Jones Jackson, February 1972, Alice DeLamar Estate, Palm Beach, FL. Courtesy of the Richard Adams Romney Papers, Yale University Library.
Home of Jean Jones Jackson and Sandy Jackson, Alice DeLamar Estate, Palm Beach, FL, n.d.. Courtesy of the Estate of Sandy Jackson.
Jean Jones Jackson and Sandy Jackson, Alice DeLamar Estate, Palm Beach, FL, n.d.. Courtesy of the Estate of Sandy Jackson.
Portrait of Jean Jones Jackson, Summer 1967. Photo by Emerick Bronson. Courtesy of the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., Betty Parsons Papers.
(Left to Right) Dudley Huppler, Keith Ingermann, unknown man, Jean Jones Jackson, Piero Aversa, unknown man. Alice DeLamar Estate, Palm Beach, FL, n.d.. Courtesy of Nona Footz.
Alice DeLamar Estate, Palm Beach, FL, n.d.. Courtesy of the Estate of Sandy Jackson.