Bogalusa artist Alvin Carter dies

By Jacob Brooks
The Daily News
Published/Last Modified on Wednesday, September 9, 2009 7:50 AM CDT


Alvin Carter, the Bogalusa artist known for colorful street-side murals and paintings depicting the struggle of African Americans, has died at the age of 66.

Carter died Friday night at Lakeview Regional Medical Center in Covington following a heart attack, said his mother, Mattie Carter Wallace, a Bogalusa resident.

“He loved anything to do with painting,” Wallace said on Tuesday, still grieving after her son’s death.

Bogalusa artist Alvin Carter stands next to one his paintings at his former studio on Columbia Street. Carter, known for his colorful murals and paintings depicting the African American struggle, died Friday at the age of 66. DAILY NEWS FILE PHOTO

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Carter suffered from severe asthma and breathing problems, and his heart failed him while undergoing a procedure, Wallace said.

Carter was born in Bogalusa March 31, 1943, and graduated from Central Memorial High in 1961.

Even in high school, Carter was an aspiring professional artist, selling his paintings at a local store on Columbia Street, said his mother.

He joined the U.S. Navy after high school, serving on a ship and developing an appreciation for photography, Wallace said.

After a four-year enlistment, Carter attended art schools in California and Minnesota, eventually residing in St. Paul, Minn., where he developed his trademark skills as a muralist.

“He was commissioned to do different paintings in St. Paul and Minneapolis,” Wallace said.

After living in South Bend, Ind., and elsewhere, Carter returned to Bogalusa about 10 years ago, his mother said.

Here, he continued to paint out of his studio on Columbia Street and later 5th Street.

He worked with children at his studio and art students at local schools.

“He wanted to teach the children,” Wallace said. “He just loved the kids.”

Carter often used vibrant colors — neon green, orange, bright blue — in his paintings that had a way of making them pop into viewers’ eyes.

Many images that he painted looked “like it was just going to jump off the wall,” Wallace said.

Wallace said Carter learned a lot at the art schools he attended, but much of his talent was simply a “gift from God.”

Carter, who commonly sat outside his studio watching people walk and ride by the street, readily spoke to anyone willing to listen about his art or artwork in general. Art, according to Carter, does not always need to mean something.

“Don’t question why the birds sing, just enjoy the song,” he said during an interview with The Daily News in 2007.

Funeral arrangements are pending with Cook-Richmond Funeral Home.

 

Comments

    Grace Hall Dorsey wrote on Sep 14, 2009 10:31 PM:

    " I had the great pleasure of meeting and working with Alvin in my art classes. He was so generous with his time when it came to kids and art. He was a truly special artist.
    I'll never forget him.
    g "

    Ricardo Lopez wrote on Sep 14, 2009 5:38 AM:

    " My deepest sympathy family of Alvin Carter. His presence will be missed. "

    Patricia Clemons wrote on Sep 10, 2009 11:13 AM:

    " To the family of Alvin Carter:

    May the warmth of God's love embrace you. May the compassion of those who care surround you, and may the joy you once shared brighten your days with the assurance that love lives forever.

    With deepest sympathy.
    Patricia Thomas Clemons "

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