Early life and education
Dusti Bongé, née Eunice Lyle Swetman, was the youngest of three children born to a prominent Biloxi, Mississippi, banking family. When she was young, Bongé was attracted to the arts and wrote, produced, directed and acted in plays starring other neighborhood children on the wide gallery of the family's beachfront home. Her interest in theater continued into adulthood. Because her passion for acting was frowned upon by her family, she struck a deal that if she first completed college she would be allowed to go to a drama school. She graduated high school at the age of sixteen and completed her four year college curriculum in two years. She graduated fromCareer
Bongé started her career when she moved to New York in 1924 where she acted on the stage and in films. Bongé decided to give up her acting career when she discovered she was pregnant with her son Lyle Bongé. Bongé moved back to her home town of Biloxi in 1934 after she and Arch decided they did not want to raise Lyle in New York. Bongé began to explore painting after leaving acting to start a family.Early work
Bongé showed promise as a painter and Arch encouraged her to work with him. After Arch's death from Lou Gehrig's disease in 1936, Bongé sought solace in the studio where they had worked together and began to paint seriously. Bongé's early work depicted scenes of Biloxi, partly inspired by Archie’s renderings of the waterfront and cityscape. Bongé also produced a series of still life compositions as well as a variety of self portraits. Her early work was representational but showed her ability to move from a realist to a much more modernist style.Surrealism
In 1938, she began to experiment withAbstract Expressionism
The years 1953-1956 mark a transitional period in her work as she moves fully into Abstract Expressionism, the style in which she seemed to find her greatest satisfaction. Some of the work from this period features angular forms and paint surfaces that are etched and textured. Betty Parsons gave her her first solo exhibition in April 1956. Bongé continued to work in a similar abstract style in the 1960s, but with a darker palette. As a ''Later Work
In the 1980s Bongé continued to make a body of abstract work. Her work from this period explores conceptual themes such as the transcendent Buddhist concept of the "Void" During this period of exploring conceptual themes she painted her "Void" series. This series focused on circle shapes in abstract form and illustrated emptiness. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, small format watercolor paintings many onPersonal life
Dusti met her husband while they both were going to school in Chicago. Arch was working a doorman and opened a door for Dusti. They were married in 1928. Dusti and Arch Bongé's only child, Lyle Bongé, was born November 5, 1929. Lyle was drawn to art from spending time with his mother in her studio, inspiring him to pursue photography. While Bongé enjoyed success by being a part of the New York art scene she preferred to paint in her home town of Biloxi where she raised her son and continued to have success in her career. Although in later years, she had an active social life, dated and had numerous proposals, Dusti never remarried.Exhibitions
Bongé's first exhibition was in the Contemporary arts Gallery in New York in 1939. Bongé continued to show in New York at Betty Parsons Gallery beginning in the mid 1940s, She had her first solo exhibition at Betty Parsons Gallery in 1956. Bongé continued to show at Betty Parson's until 1976. Bongé had solo exhibitions at Betty Parson's in 1958, 1960, and 1962. She had her final exhibition at Betty Parsons Gallery in 1975. The Ogden Museum of Southern Art held a exhibition of Bongé's work in 2019 called "Piercing the Inner Wall: The Art of Dusti Bongé." The exhibition followed the release of “Dusti Bongé, Art and Life: Biloxi, New Orleans & New York,” Bongé's work has been exhibited at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans; theMuseum collections
*Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, NY *The Johnson Collection, Spartanburg, SC *Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, Laurel, MS *Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS *Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, AL *Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, GA *Museum of Art and Archaeology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO *Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY *Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, LA *University of Southern Mississippi Art Museum, Hattiesburg, MS Digital Commons. "Untitled II." The Aquila Digital Community. Accessed May 11, 2015.http://aquila.usm.edu/cookartgallery_perm/10/. *Walter Anderson Museum of Art, Ocean Springs, MSReferences
Further reading
*Black, Patti Carr, American Masters of the Mississippi Gulf Coast: George Ohr, Dusti Bongé, Walter Anderson, Richmond Barthe, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2009. *Black, Patti Carr, Art in Mississippi 1720-1980, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. *Black, Patti Carr, The Mississippi Story, Jackson: Mississippi Museum of Art, 2007. *Bongé, Dusti, ed. Nancy Longnecker, Dusti Bongé: The Life of an Artist, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1982. Falk, Peter Hastings, ed., Who Was Who in American Art 1564-1975, Madison, CT: Soundview Press, 1999. *Falk, Peter Hastings, ed., Who Was Who in American Art 1564-1975, Madison, Connecticut: Soundview Press, 1999. *Gruber, J. Richard and David Houston, The Art of the South 1890-2003: The Ogden Museum of Southern Art, London: Scala Publishers, 2004. *Hall, Lee, Betty Parsons, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991. *"Dusti Bonge." MPB video, 29:49. DustiBonge.org. Accessed May 1, 2015. http://dustibonge.org/early-personal-life/. {{DEFAULTSORT:Bonge, Dusti Abstract expressionist artists 1903 births 1993 deaths American artists