Mack Cox

Join researcher and collector Mack Cox as he shares the story of the marriages, mentorship, and geography that entwined the lives of two of Kentucky’s most important artists: Matthew Harris Jouett (1788-1827) and Oliver Frazer (1808), and their descendants. This lecture will tell that story and the travels and adventures of these paintings as they moved from the first owners to the present with the backdrop of war, financial crises, and cultural revolutions in American history.

Mack Cox is a Kentucky native, received BS and MS degrees in geology from Eastern Kentucky University in Richmond, Kentucky, and pursued an oil and gas career from which he retired in 2017. He and his wife Sharon have collected early Kentucky material since 2005, and their collection was covered in the July/August 2011 issue of the Magazine Antiques (“The Kentucky Collection of Sharon and Mack Cox” by Daniel Kurt Ackermann). In 2013, their collection was described as “one of the finest assemblages of antebellum Kentucky material” in the book “Collecting Kentucky 1790-1860” by Lacer & Howard.

Mack currently serves on the executive committee and board of the Henry Clay Memorial Foundation in Lexington, Kentucky. He also serves on advisory boards for the Colonial Williamsburg Art Museums in Virginia, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in North Carolina, and The Magazine Antiques in New York City.  He, along with his wife, Sharon are regional representatives for MESDA’s Object Database and have submitted over 100 surveys of Kentucky material.  He has lectured at numerous KY locations and for the Decorative Arts Trust in Philadelphia, the Washington, D.C. Decorative Arts Forum, Winterthur Museum and Gardens in Delaware, the Philadelphia Museum of Fine Arts, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in North Carolina, Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia, and Historic Deerfield in Massachusetts. Mack’s primary mission in retirement is to discover and document early Kentucky furniture and he is considered a leading authority on the subject.  He has authored numerous articles about early Kentucky furniture, and “An American Story - The Redd Family Portraits,” as part of Into the Bluegrass, Art and Artistry of Kentucky’s Historic Icons by Mel Stewart Hankla, published by American Historic Services, LLC in 2020.


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