A man uses his wife to secure information from a business associate which puts him in...
THE VISE (1955) 6:30pm with #JoyAdamson #BryanForbes 'The Bargain' #TPTVsubtitles
A man uses his wife to secure information from a business associate which puts him in...
THE VISE (1955) 7:30pm Premiere episode with #JoyAdamson #BryanForbes 'The Bargain' #TPTVsubtitles
Johann Hermann Schein (1586), Carlos II of Spain (1716), Ernest Chausson (1855), #JoyAdamson [Friederike Viktoria Gessner] (1910), Federico Fellini (1920), Natan Sharansky (1948), Bill Maher (1956), Rainn Wilson (1966), Questlove [Ahmir Thompson] (1971), Nikki Haley (1972) were born #OnThisDay...
"Although the release was heartbreaking for the Adamsons, they were mindful that she had been born free."
🦁 Naturalist, artist, and author of "Born Free", #JoyAdamson was #BOTD 20 January 1910. #Art #Nature
Joy Adamson (1910-1980), Born Free Writer
Died #otd Joy Adamson (1910-1980), Born Free Writer, 46 years ago today #JoyAdamson life story...
A young woman with deep brown skin stands in half profile turning her head to meet us with a steady, guarded gaze. Her dark, tightly curled hair frames her face as one hand grips a long carved spear angled behind her shoulder. She wears pale metal bangles stacked on her forearm, vivid bead strands at her neck, and a wide silver, plaque-like chest ornament that glints with tiny rounded forms. At the top left, British artist Joy Adamson labels the sitter as “GUIATU ABAKORA,” and beneath it writes “BANGALI, GARISSA,” anchoring her to a specific place. The final word, “GALLA,” is a historical exonym often used for Oromo peoples. Today, it’s widely understood as outdated and can be experienced as insulting, so it is an archive term rather than a self-chosen identity. That tension between a named person and the categories applied to her sits at the heart of this watercolor. Adamson’s careful attention to adornment can be read as admiration for craft, status, and lived style so the jewelry isn’t decoration so much as biography, carried on the body in metalwork and beadwork. Yet, the written captioning also shows how easily a portrait can slip into ethnographic shorthand. The most human counterweight is Guiatu Abakora herself with her turned shoulders, lifted chin, and direct eye contact suggesting agency … as if she’s deciding how she will be seen, even within someone else’s labeling system to help us ask “Who gets to describe whom, and what changes when we keep the named person at the center?” The artwork is part of Adamson’s series of watercolor portraits of Kenyan communities, made as she traveled in the north and east of the country. The museum record does not publish an exact year of creation although Adamson’s cultural watercolors are generally dated to the 1940s through early 1960s, before her worldwide fame for the memoir “Born Free” about raising and returning a lioness named Elsa to the wild in what is now Kenya, alongside her husband George, a game warden.
“Galla Girl Ornaments (Guiatu Abakora)” by Joy Adamson (Austrian-born British) - Watercolor on paper / c. 1950s - National Museums of Kenya Archives (Nairobi) #WomenInArt #JoyAdamson #FriederikeVictoriaGessner #Adamson #NationalMuseumsOfKenya #art #artText #WomanArtist #WomensArt #WomenPaintingWomen
This bride is identified by artist Joy Adamson’s own inscription as Njeri Nyagesua Njiri, painted at Sharagu, Kenya, and belongs to a wider mid-20th-century series (now preserved at the National Museums of Kenya) in which Adamson documented Kenya’s communities in ceremonial dress. The painting shows a young Kikuyu woman facing us directly, her rich brown skin illuminated by soft, even light against a muted, hazy background. Her hair is mostly hidden under an elaborate halo of tightly coiled beadwork that flares out from each side of her head like twin crowns with threads of pink, lilac, and pale tones looping in dense rings. Fine painted or scarification marks frame her eyes and brow, echoing the curves of the beads. Her gaze is steady, serious, and slightly downturned, without a smile. Heavy strands of multicolored glass beads layer her chest, anchored by a large pale disc pendant that rests high on her sternum. A warm, brown cloth is draped over one shoulder, leaving the other bare so the textures of skin, paint, and jewellery are clearly visible. Her skin, the beads, and the fabric have been rendered with meticulous, almost botanical attention so that we feel the weight of the necklace, the tightness of the headpiece, and the stillness of her pose. The intricate beadwork and facial markings signal a pivotal life transition: through marriage rites, Njeri moves from girlhood into adult womanhood, gaining new status and responsibilities within Kikuyu society. The coils of beads, the layered necklaces, and the carefully applied cosmetics are not mere decoration but visual language, communicating beauty, maturity, and the honor of her family at the moment of ruracio and wedding celebration. At the same time, the bride’s calm, unsmiling expression resists romantic cliché. She appears thoughtful, self-possessed, and slightly guarded, reminding us that this is an individual with her own history, not simply an ethnographic “type.”
"Kikuyu Bride" by Joy Adamson (Austrian-Kenyan) - Watercolor on paper / c. 1950s - National Museums of Kenya (Nairobi, Kenya) #WomenInArt #JoyAdamson #JoyFriederikeVictoriaGessner #Adamson #NationalMuseumsOfKenya #arte #artText #PortraitofaWoman #art #BlueskyArt #WomensArt #WomenArtists #WomanArtist
This watercolor on paper by Austrian-born artist Friederike Victoria "Joy" Adamson (née Gessner) depicts the beautiful Guiatu Kokan Ngodana with short curly gray & black hair wearing a sleeveless top with shadows and lighting capturing her dark shoulders and face turned to look directly at us from captivating dark brown eyes. She is adorned with multi-color large-bead necklaces and a silver neck pendant mostly worn by coastal communities and believed to be influenced by contact with India. Her bracelet is aluminum, but her cowrie shell armlet is generally believed to ward off evil and also symbolize peace. Adamson is best known for the "Born Free" story which recounts her experience in raising an orphaned lioness (Elsa) in the 1950s. But long before that endeavor, she had established herself as a talented artist. The colonial British government commissioned Adamson to create an account of local cultures that resulted in over 500 paintings that are an ethnographic record of Kenya’s traditional costumes, customs and social roles. Many of the watercolors and photographs by Adamson are published in a book called "The Peoples of Kenya" published in 1967 and reprinted in 2003 which fosters appreciation and understanding for the diverse cultural practices of Kenya as well as recording the regalia, jewelry, weapons, and instruments used. Written on each painting is information detailing the name of the individual (Guiatu Kokan Ngodana), their community (Didaworette), and the location (Witu) where the painting was completed, but there is no date for this portrait. In 1977, Adamson was awarded the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art. She died January 3, 1980 after being stabbed by a disgruntled former employee while working at the Shaba National Reserve in Kenya. Her body was cremated in Nairobi and her ashes spread on the graves of Elsa the lioness and Pippa the cheetah in Meru National Park, Kenya.
Galla Woman (Guiatu Kokan Ngodana) by Joy Adamson (Austrian) - Watercolor on paper / c. 1952-1967 - National Museums of Kenya (Nairobi) #womeninart #art #womanartist #watercolor #femaleartist #artwork #womensart #watercolorpainting #JoyAdamson #AfricanArt #portraitofawoman #NationalMuseumsofKenya
"Although the release was heartbreaking for the Adamsons, they were mindful that she had been born free."
🦁 Naturalist, artist, and author of "Born Free", #JoyAdamson was #BOTD 20 January 1910. #Art #Nature
Died #otd Joy Adamson, Born Free Writer, 45 years ago today #JoyAdamson www.outlived.org/person/joy-adamson-25
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Carlos II of Spain (1716), #JoyAdamson [Friederike Viktoria Gessner] (1910), DeForest Kelley (1920), Federico Fellini (1920), Natan Sharansky (1948), Bill Maher (1956), Rainn Wilson (1966), Questlove [Ahmir Thompson] (1971), Nikki Haley (1972) & Philippe Cousteau, Jr. (1980) were born #OnThisDay...