Nancy Youdelman

Nancy Youdelman
Born (1948-06-10) June 10, 1948
New York, N.Y.
Nationality American
Education Fresno State College, California Institute of the Arts, University of California, Los Angeles
Known for Sculpture: Mixed Media/Encaustic
Movement Feminist Art Movement
Website Official website

Nancy Youdelman (born 1948, New York City) is a mixed media sculptor who lives and works in Clovis, California. She also taught art at California State University, Fresno from 1999 until her retirement in 2013. "Since the early 1970s Youdelman has been transforming clothing into sculpture, combining women's and girl's dresses, hats, gloves, shoes, and undergarments with a variety of organic materials (flowers, roots, leaves, and vines) and common household objects (buttons, pins, photographs, and letters).[1]

Marina La Palma writes in The magazine, "Youdelman studied costume design at Fresno State University and was drawn into the Feminist Art program founded by Judy Chicago in 1970. She went on to the Cal Arts program that followed a short time after this. Youdelman participated in the 1972 Womanhouse, in which artists created elaborate installations in the various rooms of an old Hollywood mansion.[2] Womanhouse evolved to become "the influential and long-lived Los Angeles Woman's Building project, and inspired similar undertakings in other cities."[3]

Education

Selected solo exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Grants

Feminist Art Program

Nancy Youdelman was one of the first students to participate in the Feminist Art Program, which Judy Chicago started in 1970 at Fresno State College.[4] Nancy recalls why she signed up for Chicago's class advertised as a sculpture class for women only:

"There was a place to sign your name; I was intrigued and signed up right away. As an art major I had taken drawing, painting, and photography classes but had avoided sculpture ...Students were required to create a series of three-dimensional cubes, one of plaster, one of wood, then one of metal...I was not interested in making cubes; I did not see the point. Instead I had taken theater classes, mostly costume and makeup, which ended up preparing me for my early artwork--the costume and makeup pieces that I did in that first feminist art class in Fresno".[4]

References

  1. Meyer, Laura (2009). A Studio of their Own: The Legacy of the Fresno Feminist Experiment (First ed.). Fresno, California: The Press at the California State University, Fresno. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-912201-39-9.
  2. La Palma, Marina. "Nancy Youdelman: Outside the Realm" (September, 2011). The Magazine.
  3. La Palma, Marina. "Nancy Youdelman: Outside the Realm". Eight Modern. THE Magazine. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  4. 1 2 Fields, Jill (2012). Entering the Picture: Judy Chicago, The Fresno Feminist Art Program, and the Collective Visions of Women Artists (First ed.). New York and London: Routledge. p. 64. ISBN 978-0415887694.
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