Jamie Darrell Lester is an American artist best known for creating ceramic, bronze, and steel sculptures that “focus on the human figure combined with imagery derived primarily from life in Appalachia, including birds, architecture, and landscape.”[1] Lester also creates paintings, digital art, and music.[2]
Sculpture
Don Knotts statue at Metropolitan Theatre, Morgantown, West Virginia
Ascending Eagle by Jamie Lester, at the Summit Bechtel Reserve
In July 2023, the Boy Scouts of America announced the unveiling and dedication of Lester's bronze "Ascending Eagle" statue as part of Scouting's Women of Character Program, which ran concurrent with their 2023 National Jamboree. The 8-feet-tall statue located at the Summit Bechtel Reserve is intended to inspire past, current and future generations of girls and women involved in Scouting.[11][12]
Other recent works include "Rising Cardinals" (2021), which is located between Neville and North Heber Streets in Beckley, WV. This sculpture was part of a beautification project for the city. It features four red cardinals and was constructed with the help of Lester's business partner, engineer Jeff Edwards. During an interview conducted during the public unveiling of the work, Lester said he chose the state bird of West Virginia to symbolize Beckley “rising up.”[13]
In an interview with Tamarack, Lester revealed that he not only sculpts in bronze, ceramics, steel, and mixed media, but also creates sculpture digitally and in virtual reality.[14] His larger projects can take several years to complete. For example, Lester stated that he worked over 4,000 hours to create his rendering of Jerry West,[15] while planning for his Don Knotts statue began nearly ten years before the final version was erected.[3] Lester has stated that his artistic style is influenced by baroque, post-impressionism, and surrealism.[1]
Painting
Lester is also an accomplished painter whose works sometimes combine his figurative representations with Appalachian themes. For example, Lester created a series of watercolor paintings showing the faces of coal miners wearing miner's helmets, which was utilized in the non-profit public awareness campaign "Remember the Miners" that launched in 2010.[16] A watercolor series Lester created in 2005 features giantized people amid Appalachian architecture.[17]
Early life and education
Born into a working-class family in Oceana, West Virginia, Lester began creating art at the age of three, due to the influence of his mother, a watercolor painter, and his father, a coal miner who introduced to him to whittling and fort building. Whittling and fort building, Lester explains, are "kind of sculptures."[18]
After graduating from West Virginia University in 1997, Lester founded Vandalia Bronze in Morgantown, WV. Aside from operating as Lester's workshop, Vandalia Bronze hosts the Nampara Arts Cooperative, which provides rentable space to ceramic artists, including equipment and kilns, and public instruction.[19]
In 2021, Lester co-founded the Love Hope Center for the Arts, a non-profit educational space in Fayetteville, WV.[20]
↑Associated Press. "Morgantown sculptor portrays actor Don Knotts in statue." Franklin Banner-Tribune. 25 Oct 2016. and "About Jamie Lester" Tamarack Foundation for the Arts. https://tamarackfoundation.org/directorylisting/jamie-lester/ (accessed 12/11/2021)