Ursula Meyer

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Born1915
Died2003 (aged 8788)
Education
  • Reggia Scuola, Faenza, Italy
KnownforSculpture
Ursula Meyer
Born1915
Died2003 (aged 8788)
Education
  • Reggia Scuola, Faenza, Italy
Known forSculpture

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

Ursula Meyer was born in Hanover, Germany in 1915.[1] She 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 remain at CUNY's Lehman College until her retirement in 1980.[3][4] She wrote a number of articles and reviews in newspapers and art magazines in the United States.[5] Her perspective on minimalist art was one of many recognized voices in the art world of the 1960s.[6] Meyer authored the book Conceptual Art published by E.P. Dutton in 1972.[7] After her death, she received a retrospective exhibit at the Art Gallery of The Graduate Center of The City University of New York.[4]

Meyer's sculpture has been described as focused on the interplay of transiency and stability,[8] flexible and transcendent of size and shape,[9] and deeply aware of the historical and political dimensions of the monumental.[10]

Exhibitions

References

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