Ursula Meyer

Ursula Meyer
Born 1915
Hanover, Germany
Died 2003 (aged 8788)
Education
  • Bauhaus, Germany
  • Reggia Scuola, Faenza, Italy
Known for Sculpture

Ursula Meyer (1915–2003) was a German-born American artist and a professor of sculpture.

Biography

Ursula Meyer was born in Hanover, Germany in 1915. She studied under Otto Lindig, Gerhard Marcks, Jan Bontjes Van Beek among others at the Bauhaus from 1934 to 1937.[1] and then studied ceramics at the Reggia Scuola in Faenza, Italy.[2] Meyer became a professor of sculpture at the City University of New York in New York City in 1963, and she would stay in this position until her retirement in 1980.[3] She wrote a number of articles and reviews in newspapers and art magazines in the United States.[4][5] Meyer's sculpture has been described as focused on the interplay of transiency and stability,[6] flexible and transcendent of size and shape,[7] and deeply aware of the historical and political dimensions of the monumental.[8]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Special exhibitions, permanent installations

References

  1. Ursula Meyer resume
  2. Ursula Meyer biography
  3. Ursula Meyer biography
  4. Ursula Meyer resume
  5. Meyer, Ursula. "How to explain pictures to a dead hare." ArtNews vol. 68, no. 9 (January, 1970)
  6. Willard, Charlotte. "The Third Dimension." New York Post 13 January 1968.
  7. Artnews vol. 66, no. 10 (February 1968)
  8. Wallach, Alan. "CAPS Sculptors." Arts Magazine 1983.

External links