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to include after Knowla citation as backup on Zadkine [1]

Early Life and Education[edit]

Emery's father was Hungarian and died when she was three years old. Although the family home was based in Larchmont, New York, Lin's mother spent the winter season in Florida. This meant shuttling between a fall and springtime school in suburban New York, and a winter school in Florida. Between 1935-42, her early childhood education included the Edgewood Rudolf Steiner School, Rye Country Day School, Palm Beach private school, West Palm Beach public school and Ursuline Convent School. She received private lessons in drawing, French, Latin and German. By the age of sixteen, Emery legally changed her first name from “Leonor” to “Lin”.

Although she did not earn a formal degree, her collegiate studies between 1942-45 included Columbia University, Syracuse University, University_of_Mexico, the Goodman School of Drama in Chicago, and University of Chicago. After that point she worked for Chicago Sun-Times newspaper. In 1945 she moved to New Orleans and worked as fashion copy writer.

Artistic Training[edit]

Between 1947-50, Emery's studies moved overseas to Paris at Cours de la Civilisation Francaise at the Sorbonne. She also attended evening drawing sessions at la Grande Chaumière in the Montparnasse arts district. Around this time she visited New Mexico and exhibited paintings at Harwood Museum, Taos. She returns to Paris in 1949 and studies sculpture in the studio of Ossip Zadkine. Returns to New Orleans and begins working in clay and plaster.

From 1951-52 she is enrolled at the New York Sculpture Center; first working in clay and pewter along with classmates Dorothy Dehner and Louise Nevelson. She then learns welding and casting, and exhibits with Herbert Ferver, David Hare, Seymour Lipton and David Smith.

At age 16, Lin entered Columbia University. From there she continued changing schools, attending Syracuse University, the University of Mexico, the University of Chicago, and the Sorbonne. Whenever there was free time from classes, she painted and drew, on her own. In Paris she spent evenings drawing from a model, and, noticing a sculpture studio, taught by Russian artist Ossip Zadkine, she enrolled. It was there that she found that sculpture would be her life.[2]

On returning to the United States she learned welding and casting at the New York Sculpture Center. Settling in New Orleans she turned her living quarters into a fully equipped studio.[3]

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Lin Emery
Born
Lenore Emery

May 20, 1926
New York City
NationalityAmerican
Known forkinetic sculpture, public art



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Insert a reference using a citation template for this magazine article [5]

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Yael Kanarek
BornJuly 7, 1967
Nationality[Israeli American]]
EducationRensselaer Polytechnic Institute, MFA Empire State College, BFA
Known forpainting, sculpture, internet art, photography, digital art, electronic literature, performance art
Notable workWorld of Awe, 1995-ongoing Textworks, 2007-ongoing
MovementInternet art, conceptual art

Yael Kanarek (born New York, United States) is an Israeli American artist based in New York City that is known for pioneering use of the the internet and language. [6]

Background[edit]

Born in New York and raised in Israel, Kanarek retuned to New York in 1991 for art school and began exhibiting in galleries.

Education[edit]

Work[edit]

  1. ^ Palmedo, Philip. "Lin Emery: Unique Forms of Continuity in Space and Time". Sculpture Magazine. No. December 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Lin Emery - Know Louisiana". Know Louisiana.
  3. ^ Lucie-Smith, Edward. Lin Emery: Borrowing the Forces of Nature. Published by The New Orleans Museum of Art, 1996.
  4. ^ Twain, Mark, and Paul Geiger. 1985. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Pleasantville, N.Y.: Reader's Digest Association.
  5. ^ Li, Shirley. "Roger Ebert's Wikipedia." The Atlantic. October 9, 2014.
  6. ^ Bard, Elizabeth. "A Video Game With Awe as Its Quest" The New York Times. March 21, 2004.