Anita Aarons

Anita Aarons (6 November 1912 – 3 January 2000) was an Australian-Canadian artist.

Anita Aarons
Born(1912-11-06)6 November 1912
Sydney, Australia
Died3 January 2000(2000-01-03) (aged 87)
Brisbane, Australia
NationalityAustralian-Canadian
Alma materSydney National Art School
OccupationArtist

Life

Born in Sydney, Aarons studied at the East Sydney Technical College[1] and the National Art School in Sydney before moving to New York City, where she graduated from Columbia University in 1964. She exhibited work in venues in the United States, Canada, and Australia. She taught sculpture and crafts in a number of institutions, and designed stained glass windows, furniture, and jewelry, in addition to working as a sculptor. Collections which include examples of her work include the Charlottetown National Craft Collection and the National Collection of the Canadian Craftsmen Guild in Toronto.[2]

On 25 June 1951, Aarons was invited to attend a meeting of the City of Sydney's Health and Recreations Committee to discuss her submission to erect a piece of sculpture in the children's playground of Phillip Park. The Council approved the submission on 2 October 1951. The sculpture was removed on 2 April 1952.[3]

In 1965 she became a critic for the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada's Journal RAIC, writing a column titled "Allied Arts" about the role of craft in architecture.[4]

In 1983, she was awarded the Diplome d'Honneur from the Canadian Conference of the Arts.[5]

Aarons returned to Australia at the end of her life and settled in Brisbane, where she died on 3 January 2000.[6]

gollark: Obviously we need monitors which can properly represent laser videos, by blinding oyu.
gollark: To be able to emit ionizing radiation, yes.
gollark: Most monitors can't even generate a lot of *visible* spectrum colors, even. There are a bunch of color space diagrams of this on the internet, except they're not a very good way to show it because, unsurprisingly, the cyan-ish bit they can't display well just looks like identical cyan.
gollark: That would just allow per-*column* control, unless you scan them left and right really fast.
gollark: But I wanted per-pixel ionizing radiation control.

References

  1. "Play Sculpture". City Art Sydney. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  2. Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller (19 December 2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5.
  3. "Play Sculpture". City Art Sydney. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  4. Alfoldy, Sandra (2012). The allied arts : architecture and craft in postwar Canada. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 21. ISBN 9780773539600.
  5. "Anita Aarons :: biography at Design and Art Australia Online". Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  6. "Anita Aarons :: biography at Design and Art Australia Online". Retrieved 23 January 2017.
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