Mary Lovelace O'Neal

Overview

Mary Lovelace O’Neal (b. 10 February 1942 – d. 10 May 2026) is known for her paintings that pair bold, monumental scale with layers of unexpected materials to explore deeply personal narratives and mythologies, as well as broader themes of racism, social justice, and contemporary critical debates. With roots in both Minimalist and Expressionist painting, her imagery has, across years and series, fluctuated between pure abstraction, narrative figuration, and the evocative spaces in between.
While attending Columbia University’s MFA program in 1969, Mary developed her Lampblack series, creating paintings in which she applied layers of loose, powdered black pigment to large unstretched and stretched canvases. She would then use a chalkboard eraser or her hands to disperse thin white lines over the velvety dimensions of black paint, taking inspiration from Barnett Newman and his “zip lines.” These lines were meant to divide and simultaneously unite the composition, as Mary abandoned her expressionist style to instead engage in a dialogue around flatness, utilizing the color field method of soak staining. Effacing the concept of the individual mark in favor of large, flat, stained, and soaked areas of color, Lovelace O’Neal’s repeated use of black pigment acted in response to contemporaries within the Black Arts Movement and their critique of the lack of narrative social activism within her work. She, however, described the Lampblack paintings as “as black as they could be,” alluding to their literal blackness and linking the abstraction to giving voice to the intangible elements of the human spirit.
Throughout her career, Mary Lovelace O’Neal blazed a trail for Black female abstract painters, fighting for inclusion and redefining a movement by insisting on an aesthetic integration of experiences once considered exclusive to white male painters. Originally from Jackson, Mississippi, Mary held a BFA from Howard University, attended a residency at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, and graduated as the only African American student in Columbia’s MFA program in 1969. Her work is included in permanent institutional collections such as the Art Institute of Chicago, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the de Young Museum in San Francisco.


Lovelace O’Neal recently had a solo exhibition at SFMOMA. Recent group exhibitions include the Whitney Biennial 2024, Even Better than the Real Thing (curated by Chrissie Iles and Meg Onli); Edges of Ailey at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, curated by Adrienne Edwards; Paris Noir at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, curated by Alicia Knock; SFAI: The People Make This Place at SFMOMA; and the traveling exhibition Making Their Mark: Works from the Shah Garg Collection at the Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, the Kemper Art Museum, and the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Lovelace O’Neal also had the solo exhibition Mary Lovelace O’Neal: Blacker Than a Hundred Midnights Down in a Cypress Swamp at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, curated by Valerie Cassel Oliver and accompanied by a monograph. Upcoming exhibitions include Revelations: A Journey Into Abstraction at the National Museum of African American History and Culture and Hard Art at MoMA PS1.

Works
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, A Purple Foot Whose Real Name Only Passion Knows #2, circa 1990s
    A Purple Foot Whose Real Name Only Passion Knows #2, circa 1990s
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Anticipation, circa 1990s
    Anticipation, circa 1990s
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Race Woman Series #7, circa 1990s
    Race Woman Series #7, circa 1990s
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Lost in the Deep Medina (From the Lost in the Medina Series), circa 1989-1990
    Lost in the Deep Medina (From the Lost in the Medina Series), circa 1989-1990
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Brazilian Ladies in the Carnival, circa 1985
    Brazilian Ladies in the Carnival, circa 1985
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, It Takes Three (To Do It) (from the Whales Fucking Series), circa 1981-1982
    It Takes Three (To Do It) (from the Whales Fucking Series), circa 1981-1982
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Untitled (Lampblack 1), circa 1970s
    Untitled (Lampblack 1), circa 1970s
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, The Four Cardinal Points Are Three: North and South, circa 1970's
    The Four Cardinal Points Are Three: North and South, circa 1970's
  • Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Jabberwocky, 1976-1977
    Jabberwocky, 1976-1977
Press
Art Fairs