A-Argus Enterprises, Incorporated
Hitchhikers In Each Other's Mind
Hitchhikers In Each Other's Mind
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Author: Jim Meaders
Publisher: A-Argus Enterprises, Incorporated
Published: 06/27/2011
Pages: 264
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.68lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.51w x 0.55d
ISBN: 9780984259632
About the Author
Jim Meaders was born in 1949 in Birmingham, Alabama, but moved with his mother and father to Lakeland, Florida in 1954. Jim grew up in Lakeland and the small Florida town in The Summer of My Fourteenth Year is based on Lakeland and some of his experiences during 1963. Jim grew up in service stations that his dad ran between 1954 and 1967, probably pumping more gasoline by the time he graduated high school than most people pump all their lives. Jim Meaders attended the Ringling School of Art in Sarasota, Florida, from 1967-69, and graduated from Florida Southern College in Lakeland, Florida with a B.A. in Art in 1976. He continued his art pursuits at Clemson University in South Carolina graduating with his M.F.A. in Visual Studies with a painting emphasis in 1979. Jim and his wonderful wife, Dorian, whom he met in 1970 and persuaded to marry him in 1971, spent the spring semester of 1978 in Italy, Germany, Belgium, and France studying and traveling. Jim started teaching in 1979 and taught for three years in South Carolina, four years in Georgia, and six years in West Virginia before moving to Nashville, Tennessee in 1992, where he is still teaching art to college students. Jim primarily has taught a variety of courses in his thirty-one year teaching career including design, drawing, painting, ceramics, art appreciation, art history, and art education. He has exhibited work in regional and national art competitions in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Utah, California, and Tennessee since 1972. Jim's first book is not about art or creating art, but draws (no pun intended) on lingering memories of his childhood and how it's when we are children that we are the most imaginative. As Picasso once said, "It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child."
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