Born in 1930 in Stewartville, Guyana, South America,
Locke began painting in 1947 under ER Burrowes, MBE,
in the Working People's Art Class in Georgetown, Guyana.
Awarded a British Council Scholarship in 1954, he studied
at Bath Academy of Art in Wiltshire, England. In 1959 he
was awarded a Guyana Government Award to Edinburgh University,
Scotland.
In 1979 he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in Sculpture and came
to the United States. He was artist-in-Residence at Arizona State
University for one year; he became a permanent resident in 1980.
During the following eleven years spent in the Southwest, Locke was known
for his figurative sculptures in bronze and for his series of articles on
the contemporary art of the Southwest in Artspace magazine, for which he
was Arizona correspondent. In 1982 he was art critic for New Times, a
weekly news and arts journal in Phoenix. His art criticism has also appeared
in Arts Magazine.
He began painting again in 1989. He moved to Atlanta in 1990 and for five years
was one of the resident studio artists at Atlanta Contemporary Arts Center.
He has been a member of the part-time faculty at Georgia State University and
Atlanta College of Art. He retired from teaching in 1996. For three years he
wrote a weekly review for Creative Loafing, Atlanta and is a member of the
Advisory Board of Art Papers.
Currently Locke’s work, primarily sculpture, is influenced as much by native
cultures and vernacular myth as by classical European tradition. His most
recent body of work seamlessly fuses these elements, integrating influences
of his various ancestries (Africa, Asia, European).