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Virginia
A. Myers
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Solon
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interviewed
8-2-1999 |
printmaking,
drawing, painting |
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biographical
sketch
artwork
interview clips
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Foil
Imaging...A New Art Form
a
new art book and functional teaching text establishing an
aesthetic and technical foundation for a new art form.
More than 250 2D and 3D art pieces are illustrated in color.
hardcover;
by Virginia A. Myers and 48 foil artists
Call
800.626.0411 to receive a free brochure
about this new limited edition book
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| biographical
sketch |
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| Virginia
A. Myers was born in Greencastle, Indiana, in 1927, and grew up with
her parents and younger sister mostly in Cleveland, Ohio. Her father
taught at various colleges and schools. She studied at George Washington
University and the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C., and
received her B.A. in drawing and painting in 1949. She earned |
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her
M.F.A. in painting in 1950 from the California College of Arts and
Crafts in Oakland, California. She is single and has no children.
She is a professor of art at the University of Iowa, and does mainly
printmaking, drawing, and painting. Her current focus is on the foil
stamping process and the Iowa Foil Printer invention. |
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| artwork
(click on picture for larger
image) |
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A
Time of Malfeasance #3
copyright
© 1974
Virginia A. Myers
All Rights Reserved |
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A
Time of Malfeasance #5
copyright
© 1974
Virginia
A. Myers
All Rights Reserved |
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Moonrise
in Winter
copyright
© 1997
Virginia
A. Myers
All Rights Reserved |
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Spring
Storm
copyright
© 1999
Virginia
A. Myers
All Rights Reserved |
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| interview
clips (see
also Making Art in Iowa and
Art & Spirituality) |
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Growing
up
(44 sec.) |
Early
choice
(60 sec.) |
Process
(37 sec.) |
Developing
(60 sec.) |
Aesthetic
news
(56 sec.) |
Grateful
(43 sec.) |

(301KB)
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| text
clips from interviews (see interview
clips above) |
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Growing
up
My dear
mother, who had no art background but who realized the value of the
cultural assets of a great town like Cleveland, took usSis and
meto Saturday morning art classes at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
It was a great experience. And the classes were always over at twelve
noon. And then Mom would meet us and take us to the restaurant. In the
afternoon starting at two, thered be a special program in the
auditorium for kids. But there would always be about an hour between
the time we would finish eating and that program, which we could wander
the museum. Two oclock would come, there we were at the auditorium.
It was a whole Saturday occupation for my mother. So, that was a very
important experience.
back
to clips
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Early
choice
In seventh
grade, when I was forced to take a sewing class, I hated it! Make that
stupid apron with two stripes on it, you know, and a tie in the back.
And what were the boys taking? Woodshopthats where I wanted
to be. Early on, I wanted to be an artist. And I thought, Well,
you could get married. But I observed how hard my mother workedthe
piles of ironing when everything had to be ironed, you know, and full
time keeping the house, and how hard Dad worked to keep us in a good
financial status. And I thought, I cant do it. If
Im going to get married, of course, I want to have childrenthats
what marriage is about. And it isnt that I didnt like children.
Heavens above, I spent fifteen summers in summer camp counseling and
loved every minute of it. So it was an early choice. And to say that
there hadnt been opportunities meanwhile along the way to get
married, oh, yes! But, it wasnt part of what I thought was the
plan.
back
to clips
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Process
The process
is exciting. When you cut a burin line, or a series of them, and its
just right, and you ink and wipe the plate, and you lift that damp print
off of the plate, and its just ittheres something
wonderful that happens to you. Or with foil stamping, when you are overlaying
foil and working through the layersbecause foil stamping is a
layered processand you are seeing colors and textures emerge that
you didnt dream of that are carrying your initial aesthetic drive
into new orbits, thats heaven! And its intoxicating, it
really is! And it keeps you doing it.
back
to clips
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Developing
Ive
found out that when youre alone, the great ideas can come out.
Thats why I dont allow radios in my classroom. I want you
to hear yourself think. You have plenty of noise in the world; you dont
need these distractions. Im not always too popularId
rather have them hate me now, than five or six years and they get out,
then they go, Why didnt she teach me this?
Begin to
develop your priorities, and to seek out who you are, and not be afraid
to think, Oh, I dont have to be normal.
You have to know something before you can feel it, and then you
have to know some ways of manifesting it. You have to be flexible, too.
But you also have to be tough, and you just cant go along always
with the crowd. You really cant. Youll suffer for it, but
it isnt all suffering catfish either. The orbits in which a creative
person operates are much wider than the average person.
back
to clips
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Aesthetic
news
You have
to be in touch with the fact that you can produce something and you
dont always know whether its going to be good or bad. You
dont stop to think of that, just make it! Do it! The real test,
if youre a creative person, is that you do it not just when youre
feeling good. Anybody can be creative when theyre feeling good.
But, do you do it when youre not feeling so good? And some of
the days when youre not feeling wellI can speak from my
own experiencesome of the best things come out. You dont
know! You dont know, until you go down and present yourself to
your work table or your tools or whatever it isyour paintbrushessay,
Well, here I am. I wonder what the grand aesthetic news from the
interior is today! And sometimes its not very good, and
sometimes its wonderful, and sometimes its in between. But
the most important thing, after all, is that you were there today. And
you tried.
back
to clips
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Grateful
Im
just grateful to be here. I just feel extremely lucky. I think about
it every day. I walk out there and look around. The other night, I was
sitting out on the deck, and the stars had come out, you know, and I
could see the planes going way up therecouldnt even hear
them. There was the Big Dipper and the night sounds were in the woods,
and I thought, Wowthis is something wonderful! I have no excuse
not to do my work well. Its all right. So far, so good, if I can
just keep things going. And if I can see the foil stamping business
so that it really becomes a viable art form, well, to put it very succinctly,
dying will not be so hard.
back
to clips
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