Anne Arnold
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Anne Arnold | |
|---|---|
| Born | May 2, 1925 |
| Died | June 20, 2014 (aged 89) |
| Education | Art Students League |
| Alma mater | University of New Hampshire, Ohio State University |
| Known for | Whimsical sculptures of animals and people |
| Spouse | Ernest Briggs |
Anne Arnold (May 2, 1925- June 20, 2014) was an American sculptor best known for her whimsical life-size and sometimes larger than life-size sculptures of animals and people rendered in wood, ceramic, or softer materials such as canvas and Dynel, and resins.[1]
Arnold was born on May 2, 1925, in Melrose, Massachusetts, where she was raised. Her father was Edmund Arnold, a civil engineer, and her mother was Fanny (née Doty) Arnold. She had two brothers, and together they grew up spending their summers on the coast of Massachusetts in Humarock.[2] She is a direct descendant of Benedict Arnold, and can trace her ancestry back to the Mayflower. Anne married the abstract painter Ernest Briggs in 1960.[2] Arnold and Briggs bought a house and barn in Montville, Maine, in 1961, at the foot of Hogback Mountain.[2] Briggs died in 1984.[1] Anne's long-time companion was the photographer Robert Brooks.[1]
In 1946 Arnold received her BA from the University of New Hampshire, and in 1947 an MA from Ohio State University. She studied art from 1949 until 1953 at the Art Students League in New York.[1]