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Edwin Scheier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American ceramicist (1910–2008)
Edwin Scheier
Born
Edwin Scheier

November 11, 1910
DiedApril 20, 2008(2008-04-20) (aged 97)
NationalityAmerican
EducationSelf-trained, free seminars atCooper Union
Known forPottery,Sculpture,Computer graphics,Weaving.
MovementAmerican craft andModernist
Edwin and Mary Scheier, bowl, 1959

Edwin Scheier (November 11, 1910 – April 20, 2008) was an Americanartist, best known for hisceramic works with his wife,Mary Scheier.

Early life

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Edwin Scheier was born inThe Bronx,New York, to a Jewish German immigrant father, and an American mother. Scheier's father died shortly after his son's birth. Although his mother remarried, Scheier was left to his own devices, and dropped out of school before high school, in order to make a living. During theGreat Depression, he criss-crossed the nation before returning to New York City.

Although never formally trained, Scheier attended free seminars atCooper Union, and also worked for asilversmith and a ceramicist. He often examined works in the city's museums, and first, and briefly, met his future wife, Mary Goldsmith, in theMetropolitan Museum of Art. A period as a public puppeteer led him to take a position teaching crafts through theWPA. This led to other positions in the WPA, and it was through one of these roles, as a field supervisor of craft programs, that he again met Mary, who was directing a ceramics studio at theBig Stone Gap Federal Art Gallery inAbingdon, Virginia. They were married on August 19, 1937, eventually resigned their posts with the WPA, and after a period as itinerant puppeteers, established a long-term partnership asfine ceramicists.[1][2]

New Hampshire

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As the Scheiers learned to collaborate, with Edwin's sculptural work being bonded to Mary's thrown works, their reputations grew. They received an offer to take positions at theUniversity of New Hampshire, where Mary became Artist-in-Residence. The couple taught there for over 20 years before moving toMexico to studyOaxacan Indian arts and crafts.

During the summer of 1945, the Scheiers were invited to travel to Puerto Rico to train ceramic arts students, for a small pottery that the Puerto Rican government intended to establish. The Scheiers visited briefly, after which an administrator of thePuerto Rico Industrial Development Company, or PRIDECO, traveled in America with Edwin, learning more about the ceramics industry.[3]

Oaxaca

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The Scheiers spent most of the 1960s inOaxaca.[4] They examined, studied, and learned the techniques of theZapotec peoples inweaving,painting, sculpture, and pottery. Many of Edwin's themes are enhanced in these mediums by the play of positive and negative space.

Later life

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After years in Oaxaca, the Scheiers returned to the United States, settling inGreen Valley,Arizona, where Edwin and Mary resided until their deaths. Until about a year before his death Edwin continued to create art work, though due to age and health, he was then creating "computer paintings" in his studio. The computer paintings came about primarily out of frustration and his deep desire to create. Though his heart would no longer allow him to lift heavy blocks of clay, his mind was still active. On an impulse he went to a computer store, purchased a computer, a color ink jet printer, and a graphical sketch pad - from this he began to create what he would call "computer paintings." As with pottery, his use of the computer was self-taught. Here was a man in his early 90s starting a new artistic method. He did not ask for help, he just did it.

Filmmaker Ken Browne examined the lives and works of the Scheiers in his 2000 documentary,Four Hands, One Heart.[5][1]

Mary died in May 2007 at 99.[6] Edwin died less than a year later in April 2008 at the age of 97.[7]

About 40 pieces of the Scheirs' work are on display at the University of New Hampshire Library,[8] and the couple's work is also found in the permanent collection of theCurrier Museum of Art[citation needed] and theHerberger College of the Arts atArizona State University.[citation needed] Their works have also been shown at theNewark Museum,Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and theCranbrook Art Museum.[citation needed]

Themes and motifs

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Edwin Scheier's work often employed symbols for life, birth, and rebirth.[7]The figures applied to the thrown vessels often involve people within people, womb-like, or within animals. Scheier often utilized stylistic techniques learned during his time in Oaxaca. His designs were often compared to those ofPablo Picasso andPaul Klee but ultimately, as an artist, they were his own.[2][9] In 1988, Edward Lebow described Scheier's figure work as showing “the humorous lyrical primitivism of the personal subconscious.”[7]

Notes

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  1. ^abPhoenix New Times - Arts - Four Hands, One Heart
  2. ^ab"Currier Collections Online - "Platter with Abstract Head Design" by Edwin Scheier". Archived fromthe original on 2007-10-09. Retrieved2007-01-20.
  3. ^Komanecky, Michael A. (1993).American Potters: Mary and Edwin Scheier. Manchester, New Hampshire: The Currier Gallery of Art.
  4. ^University of New Hampshire Library - Milne Special Collection & Archives - Scheier Pottery Collection
  5. ^Browne, Ken."Four Hands One Heart". Archived fromthe original on 6 July 2008.
  6. ^Heydarpour, RojaMary Scheier, 99, Creator of Elegant Pottery, Is Dead.The New York Times, May 19, 2007. Accessed May 19, 2007.
  7. ^abcLovelace, Joyce (Jul 2, 2008)."Moving On, Inspiring Projects, Farewells".American Craft Magazine. RetrievedJan 7, 2014.
  8. ^"Edwin and Mary Scheier Pottery Collection".University of New Hampshire. Retrieved9 August 2019.
  9. ^"The Newark Museum: Great Pots: Contemporary Ceramics from Function to Fantasy | Edwin and Mary Scheier". Archived fromthe original on 2006-12-13. Retrieved2009-03-12.

References

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  • American Potters: Mary and Edwin Scheier by Michael K. Komanecky. The Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire.ISBN 0-929710-12-6

External links

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Honorary Fellows are listed initalics.
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Recipients of the Gold Medal for Consummate Craftsmanship
Dorothy Liebes (1970)
Anni Albers (1981)
Harvey Littleton (1983)
Lucy M. Lewis (1985)
Margret Craver (1986)
Peter Voulkos (1986)
Gerry Williams (1986)
Lenore Tawney (1987)
Sam Maloof (1988)
Ed Rossbach (1990)
John Prip (1992)
Beatrice Wood (1992)
Alma Eikerman (1993)
Douglass Morse Howell (1993)
Marianne Strengell (1993)
Robert C. Turner (1993)
John Paul Miller (1994)
Toshiko Takaezu (1994)
Rudolf Staffel (1995)
Bob Stocksdale (1995)
Jack Lenor Larsen (1996)
Ronald Hayes Pearson (1996)
June Schwarcz (1996)
Wendell Castle (1997)
Ruth Duckworth (1997)
Sheila Hicks (1997)
Kenneth Ferguson (1998)
Karen Karnes (1998)
Warren MacKenzie (1998)
Rudy Autio (1999)
Dominic Di Mare (1999)
L. Brent Kington (2000)
Cynthia Schira (2000)
Arline Fisch (2001)
Gertrud Natzler (2001)
Otto Natzler (2001)
Don Reitz (2002)
Kay Sekimachi (2002)
William Daley (2003)
Fred Fenster (2005)
Dale Chihuly (2006)
Paul Soldner (2008)
Katherine Westphal (2009)
Albert Paley (2010)
Stephen De Staebler (2012)
Betty Woodman (2014)
Gerhardt Knodel (2016)
Jun Kaneko (2018)
Joyce J. Scott (2020)
Jim Bassler (2022)
Lia Cook (2022)
Richard Marquis (2022)
Judy Kensley McKie (2022)
John McQueen (2022)
Patti Warashina (2022)
Nick Cave (2024)
Wendy Maruyama (2024)
Anne Wilson (2024)
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