01/30/2026
Paula Clendenin devoted many years to West Virginia State University as one of its most inspiring and beloved professors, sharing her passion for art and the Appalachian landscape with generations of students. She continues to inspire us all with her amazing work!
Paula Clendenin was born on June 22, 1949, in Cedar Grove, Kanawha County, and her work feels inseparable from the mountains that raised her. Nationally recognized for her paintings, Clendenin creates richly colored, textured landscapes where West Virginia’s ridgelines blend with spiritual and mystical symbols, turning familiar terrain into something deeply internal and almost sacred.
She studied at West Virginia University, earning both her bachelor’s degree and an MFA. Late in her undergraduate years, a printmaking class changed her direction and pushed her fully toward art. While she continued printmaking, she soon moved to canvas, and by the mid 1980s had developed a signature style built on layered surfaces and abstracted mountain forms. Oil stick on paper became her preferred medium, allowing her to build dense, luminous textures that feel both grounded and otherworldly.
Clendenin’s work has appeared in more than a dozen solo exhibitions and countless group shows, including The Spirit Within, Four West Virginia Artists, sponsored by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Her paintings are held in over 25 public, corporate, and private collections, including the Library of Congress, the Dallas Library Commission, and Fleet Boston, formerly the Bank of Boston.
Her achievements include three Governor’s Awards in the West Virginia Juried Exhibition and an Award of Excellence at the Huntington Museum of Art’s Exhibition 280. Based in Charleston, Clendenin has taught at West Virginia State University and has shared her knowledge at institutions across the country, including Marshall University, West Virginia Wesleyan College, the University of Houston, and the Governor’s School for the Arts. Her work stands as a powerful example of how Appalachian landscapes continue to shape contemporary American art.
Check out her work at http://www.paulaclendenin.com