Jack Glover is an American artist living and working in Richmond, Virginia.
Jack Glover went to the John Herron Art Institute and began his life-long concentration on woodcuts at Indiana University Bloomington. "The grain of the wood dictates where a line will go, and you just have to follow it,” he said in an interview by Richmond Magazine. His dyslexia, which reverses letters, offered an advantage as wood blocks must be cut in mirror-image for printing. He developed his own woodcut printmaking technique, which is unusual in the large size of the prints. All of the woodblocks are cut by hand, and the inked impressions are hand-rubbed without the use of a press.
He participated in the East Virginia Toadsuckers musical ensemble along with Virginia Commonwealth University education professor Howard A. Ozmon Jr. and VCU special education professor Howard Garner. The group's musical virtuosity extended to banjo, guitar, washboard and kazoo played at fairs and other events. For twenty years they performed at venues such as Nashville, Tennessee’s famous Exit/In and the Mississippi Whiskers. In 1977 they appeared on the hayseed comedy variety show, Hee Haw.
In the 1960s, Glover taught at Richmond Professional Institute, now Virginia Commonwealth University's School of the Arts, where he was an Associate Professor, and he served in the Richmond City Public Schools for 39 years as Artist-in-Residence and Arts Resource Specialist.
In 2016 Glover received a Theresa Pollak Award for Excellence in the Arts from Richmond Magazine for his total body of work. He worked for almost forty years for Richmond Public Schools, including his artist-in-residence program at William Fox Elementary School. He was Richmond's Collegiate School artist-in-residence for Spark Summer 2010. Glover’s work is included in the “Artists Coloring Book Vol. II”, edited by Chuck Scalin. He was honored at the White House and the Carter Center for his book "Theatre Arts and the Handicapped."