Background
Lynda Faye Peek was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the fourth of six daughters. Her father, Norman Vance Peek, was a singer with the Deep South Boys.
Lynda Faye Peek was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the fourth of six daughters. Her father, Norman Vance Peek, was a singer with the Deep South Boys.
Peek graduated from Georgia State University in Atlanta in the 1970s with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism and psychology.
She met African American painter Hale Woodruff, whom she cited as an influence on her work, when she was about 10 years old and made her first sale at the age of 13. She created still lifes from yarn and burlap bags that were included in a furniture display at Rich"s Department Store in Atlanta. When a customer purchased the furniture, he assumed that her work was included in the sale.
She changed her name to Amalia K. Amaki in 1978 just prior to moving to New Mexico where she obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in photography and art history.
Amaki earned her Master of Arts degree in modern European and American art and a Doctor of Philosophy in twentieth-century American art and culture from Emory University in Atlanta in 1994. Amaki has taught art history at Spelman College, Morehouse College and Atlanta College of in Atlanta, Georgia.
Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia. And North Georgia College and State University in Dahlonega, Georgia.
In 2001, she became Curator of the Paul R. Jones Collection of African American at the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware where she was on the faculty in the History and Black Studies Departments until 2007.
After leaving that position, she taught art, art history, and visual studies at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Alabama until 2012. Amaki"s art explores African American life and culture through the use of photography frequently inlaid in boxes, quilts, and fans. She embellishes these pieces with found objects, like buttons, beads, flowers, and bits of fabric.
Amaki first started working with buttons as a child, when her mother gave her buttons to play with because marbles were too boyish.
Her work also includes photo (cyanotype) quilts and large scale digital photographs on fabric where portraiture is used as conduits to discussions of commercial profiling, cultural branding, and methods of advancing cultural assumptions.
She was a creative child and knew from a young age that she wanted to be an artist.