Jane Sauer
Jane Gottlieb Sauer (born 1937) is an American fiber artist, sculptor, gallerist, and educator.[1][2] She is known for her abstract waxed linen sculptures, sometimes referred to as "closed baskets". Saur founded the Textile Art Alliance; and formerly owned the Jane Sauer Gallery (2005–2013) in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Early life, family, and educationJane Gottlieb was born September 16, 1937 in St. Louis, Missouri.[1] She attended Washington University in St. Louis, and graduated with a B.F.A. degree (1959).[1][3] She married Donald Carl Sauer in 1972. She worked as a public school teacher for twelve years.[4] In the late 1990s, she moved to New Mexico.[2] CareerShe focused on painting in her early career, and shifted to fiber art. She was influenced to work in fiber by the book, Beyond Craft: The Art of Fabric (1974) by Jack Lenor Larsen and Mildred Constantine.[5] Sauer has won many awards for her waxed linen sculptures, which are constructed with a knotting technique and finished with painting.[3][6] Her works of the 1980s and 1990s display uninhibited emotion; and according to the book Makers: A History of American Studio Craft (2010) Sauer's work is one of the best examples emotionally charged American studio craft of that time period, similarly to Norma Minkowitz.[4] Sauer had a retrospective exhibition, "Jane Sauer: Impassioned Form" (2001), at the Robert Hillestad Textiles Gallery at University of Nebraska–Lincoln in Lincoln, Nebraska.[6] Other notable exhibitions include "Current Exhibition: Jane Sauer" (1988) at the St. Louis Art Museum; and the traveling group exhibition, "The Tactile Vessel: New Basket Forms" (1989–1991) at the American Craft Museum (1989, now the Museum of Arts and Design);[7] and the Erie Art Museum.[3] Sauer was the gallery director at Thirteen Moons Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico; and took over the management in 2005.[2] She founded the "Jane Sauer Gallery" in the former Thirteen Moons Gallery space, which focused on fine art and crafts and was active from 2005 until 2013.[8][9] The gallery was sold in 2013, and the name was Tansey Contemporary until 2017.[8][10] Her work is found in public museum collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,[11] Philadelphia Museum of Art,[12] the Kemper Art Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art,[13] Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,[14] and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[15] Awards and honorsSauer was a National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) fellow in 1984.[3] In 2002, Sauer was elected a fellow of the American Craft Council (ACC);[16] and in 2019, she was awarded the lifetime achievement award from the National Basketry Organization (NBO).[5] References
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