Scott, Chad, “Jean LaMarr’s Journey from Villain to Hero at Nevada Art Museum”, Forbes, January 30, 2022
→Wolfe, Ann M., Jean LaMarr, Reno, Nevada Museum of Art, 2020
→LaMarr, Jean, “Interview with Jean LaMarr: Supporting Native pride; A Native American artist talks about her community art project for reservation and urban youth”, Cultural Survival Quarterly, vol. 16, no. 3, July 31, 1992, p. 30
The Art of Jean LaMarr, Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, January 29-May 29, 2022; Boise Art Museum, Boise, January 28-June 11, 2023
→Violently Volatile: Selected Mixed Media Works from 1974 to 1995, The C.N. Gorman Museum, Davis, April 7-June 16,1995
American, Northern Paiute/Pit River multimedia artist.
Jean LaMarr or Pahime Gutne (Purple Flower) is a multimedia artist, best known for her printmaking, paintings and mural installations. Over the course of her 50-year career, she has used her art to depict Native American life.
J. LaMarr was born in Susanville, California and moved to San Jose, California as a young adult. Her move to the city was sponsored by the United States’ Relocation Program, which sought to assimilate Native Americans into dominant society by moving them from reservations to urban centres throughout the country. J. LaMarr earned her BFA from San Jose City College in 1973 and her MFA from the University of California, Berkeley in 1976.
A notice produced as part of the TEAM international academic network: Teaching, E-learning, Agency and Mentoring