Jane Clara Howard Berlandina

Jane Berlandina (1898, Nice, France - 1970) initiated her artistic studies in France at the École Nationale des Arts Decoratifs. She soon became a pupil of the famed Raoul Dufy. With Dufy’s influence Berlandina began exploring abstraction, long before it had become the predominant method of painting.

Berlandina moved to New York City before settling in California in 1931 where she began working in the American Impressionism style. She began teaching art at the University of California, Berkeley. She also became a member of the San Francisco Art Association and the Society of Women Artists. In 1939, she exhibited her work with the Fourteen Bay Area Watercolorists. As Hans Hoffman and the Berkeley School gained prominence, Berlandina was likely exposed to the growing the Abstract Expressionist movement on the West Coast. But Berlandina’s daring abstract WPA murals and watercolors became her signature style.[1]

References

  1. ^ Anderson, Alissa J., JANE BERLANDINA (1898-1970) French/American

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