a colourful array of three washer women tending to clothes on an earthy floor
Walter Feldman (1925 – 2018), born in Lynn Massachusetts.In 1942 he joined Yale School of the Fine Arts but left to join the army where he served in Europe and was awarded 4 battle stars, the Purple Heart and the combat infantry badge. He reentered Yale in 1946, studied with Whilhem deKooning and Josef Albers. He received the BFA in 1950 and was awarded the Alice Kimball English Traveling Fellowship. He returned to Yale and received the MFA in 1951 and stayed on as Instructor of Painting. In 1952 he received the print prize at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for his wood cut “ The Final Agony” . In 1953 he was appointed to the art faculty at @Brownu His work in printmaking received awards. In 1957, with a senior Fulbright Fellowship he was awarded the gold medal in Milan’s Mostra International. In 1959 he received the Childe Hassam purchase prize from the National Academy of Design and the Tonner prize from the American Color Print Society. He was awarded the George A. and Eliza Gardener Howard Fellowship and spent 1962 painting in Mexico where he absorbed a great deal of the pre Columbian imagery and culture. In 1976 he painted a 4,500 square foot exterior mural. His paintings were shown in New York, Mexico City , London, Milan, and Boston. Since 1985 he has divided his time in painting and as the designer and publisher of artists’ book under the Ziggurat press imprint and are in over a 150 public collections including MoMA and Londons V&A. Retiring in 2007 he is now Visual Art Professor Emeritus of Brown University and continues painting and producing artists’ books . Bio taken from www.walterfeldmanartist.com
Walter Feldman was born in 1925 in Lynn, Massachusetts. He attended Yale University, where he studied with Willem de Kooning and Josef Albers. His first one-person exhibition was held at Artist’s Gallery in New York in 1953. Throughout his career, Feldman’s works were included in numerous one-person and group exhibitions at major museums including the Museum of Modern Art, NY, the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, DC, the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, and the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY. He created public art works in Providence, including mosaics at Temple Beth-el, Miriam Hospital, and Temple Emanu-el, and stained-glass windows at the Sugarman Memorial Chapel.