Native American painter, printmaker, educator
Sylvia Lark
Born Sylvia L. Scappator
1947 (1947 ) Died December 27, 1990 (aged 43)Resting place Mountain View Memorial Park, Lakewood, Washington, U.S. Nationality Seneca , United StatesOther names Sylvia Scappator Lark Occupation(s) Painter, curator, professor Movement Abstract expressionism Spouse Stephen M. Chase[ 1] Children 1[ 1] Awards Fulbright grant (1977); CAA Award for Distinction (1991) Website www .sylvialark .com
Sylvia Lark (1947–1990) was a Native American/Seneca artist,[ 2] [ 3] curator, and educator. She best known as an Abstract expressionist painter and printmaker.[ 4] [ 5] Lark lived in the San Francisco Bay Area for many years.
Early life and education
Lark was born in 1947 in Buffalo, New York .[ 6] She went to high school at Nardin Academy in Buffalo.[ 7] Lark attended school at the University of Siena ; University at Buffalo (formally State University of New York, Buffalo) where she received her B.A. degree in 1969; Mills College ; and the University of Wisconsin–Madison where she received her M.A. degree in 1970 and M.F.A. degree in 1972.[ 8] [ 1] [ 9]
Career
Starting in 1972, Lark taught art at California State University, Sacramento where she remained until 1976.[ 1] In 1977, she received a Fulbright-Hays Program grant and traveled and study in Korea and Japan.[ 8] Lark taught at the University of California, Berkeley from 1977 until 1990.[ 1] Students of Lark's included Shirin Neshat .[ 10] She was awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award for teaching studio art by the College Art Association posthumously in 1991.[ 8]
Her early work used symbols and patterns, and there was a shift in her later career with more abstraction and overlapping colors with delicate textured surfaces.[ 9] She painted in oils and encaustics and printed monotypes .[ 1] Her 1983 painting series Jokhang , featured many textures and layers of colors painted over or under black leaves.[ 5] [ 2] This series was a response to her visit to Jokhang Temple in Lhasa and her study of Tibetan spirituality.[ 2] Lark was curator of the exhibition, Prints: New Points of View (1978) at the Open Ring Galleries in Sacramento.[ 11]
In 1992, she was the second inductee into Nardin Academy's Alumnae Hall of Fame.[ 7] Lark had served on the National Board of the Women's Caucus for Art from 1978 to 1984; and was the Regional Coordinator for the Coalition of Women's Art Organization from 1978 to 1990.[ 1]
Death and legacy
Lark died on cancer at the age of 43 in Berkeley on December 27, 1990.[ 8]
Her works are in the museum collections at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco ,[ 12] Metropolitan Museum of Art ,[ 13] Crocker Art Museum , Sheldon Museum of Art , Oakland Museum of California ,[ 14] and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago .[ 14]
Exhibitions
1975 – Drawings and Prints by Howard Hack , Sylvia Lark, and Leonard Sussman , San Francisco Museum of Modern Art , San Francisco, California[ 15]
1977 – Lark–Palmer Prints and Sculptures , included Sylvia Lark and Jon Palmer, Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, California[ 16]
1977 – Look, Touch, Rub, Pull, Smell, and Hear , included Carlos Villa , Chisato Nishioka Watanabe, Phil Weidman , Jon Palmer [Wikidata ] , Phil Hitchcock, Jock Reynold, Laureen Landau, Sylvia Lark, William Maxwell, Bruce Guttin, Paul DeMarinis , and Jim Pomeroy , Artspace, Sacramento, California[ 17]
1980 – Contemporary Trends in Presentation Drawings , curated by Roberta Loach, Linda Langston ; including J.J. Aasen, Walter Askin , Gary Brown, Eleanor Dickinson, Bob Anderson, Harry Lynn Krizan, Judith Linhares , Roy DeForest , Robert Freimark, Sylvia Lark, Roberta Loach, Norman Lundin, Shane Weare, Vince Perez, Mary Snowden , Palo Alto Art Center , Palo Alto, California
1980 – Bhirasri Institute of Modern Art, Bangkok, Thailand[ 6]
1983 – Galerie Akmak, Berlin, Germany[ 6]
1984 – (solo exhibition), Jeremy Stone Gallery, San Francisco, California[ 5]
1985 – Galerie Hartje, Frankfurt, Germany[ 6]
1986 – The 54th Hanga Annual, Japan-California Print Exhibition , Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum , Tokyo, Japan.[citation needed ]
1987 – The Ethnic Idea , curated by Andrée Maréchal-Workman, including Lauren Adams, Robert Colescott , Dewey Crumpler , Mildred Howard , Oliver Lee Jackson , Mary Lovelace O'Neal , Joe Sam, Elisabeth Zeilon, Tom Holland , Celeste Conner, Jean LaMarr , Sylvia Lark, Leta Ramos, Judy Foosaner, Joseph Goldyne , Belinda Chlouber, Carlos Villa , Berkeley Art Center , Berkeley, California[ 18]
1991 – North Dakota Museum of Art , Grand Fork, North Dakota[ 6]
2002 – Art/Women/California, Parallels and Intersections: 1950–2000, San Jose Museum of Art , San Jose, California[ 2]
See also
References
^ a b c d e f g "University of California: In Memoriam, 1991" . Online Archive of California (OAC) . Regents of The University of California. Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ a b c d Fuller, Diana Burgess; Salvioni, Daniela (May 29, 2002). Art/Women/California, 1950–2000: Parallels and Intersections . Univ of California Press. pp. 144, 149. ISBN 978-0-520-23065-1 .
^ Indian Truth, Issues 212-266 . Indian Rights Association. 1974. p. 12.
^ Hammond, Harmony; Quick-to-See Smith, Jaune (1985). Women of Sweetgrass, Cedar and Sage: Contemporary Art by Native American Women (Exhibition). Gallery American Indian Community House. ISBN 978-0934305006 .
^ a b c Boettger, Suzaan (February 1984). "Sylvia Lark, Jeremy Stone Gallery, San Francisco" . Artforum.com . Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ a b c d e Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy G. (December 19, 2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary . Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5 .
^ a b "Nardin Honors Artist Sylvia Lark" . The Buffalo News . June 5, 1992. Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ a b c d "Memorial Rites Set For Sylvia Lark, Abstract Painter, Professor of Art" . The Buffalo News . January 23, 1991. Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ a b Moore, Sylvia (1989). Yesterday and Tomorrow: California Women Artists . Midmarch Arts Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-9602476-9-1 .
^ Cohen, Alina (March 1, 2019). "Shirin Neshat on Her Path from Art School Outcast to Contemporary Art Icon" . Artsy . Retrieved February 3, 2022 .
^ Dalkey, Victoria (November 25, 1978). "Opening Stabs Hole in Proposition 13 Cloud" . The Sacramento Bee . p. 19. Retrieved August 2, 2024 – via Newspaper.com.
^ "Sylvia Lark" . Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco (FAMSF) . September 21, 2018. Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ "Untitled, 1980" . The Metropolitan Museum of Art . Retrieved February 2, 2022 .
^ a b "Sylvia Lark, UC Berkeley Art Professor" . The Sacramento Bee . December 30, 1990. p. 37. Retrieved April 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "Art: S.F. Museum of Art" . The Argus . Fremont, California. June 20, 1975. p. 24. Retrieved August 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "Southland Scene, Art Scene: Lark–Palmer Prints and Sculptures". Pasadena Star-News . December 22, 1977. p. A-6.
^ Johnson, Charles (October 16, 1977). "The Sea Returns" . The Sacramento Bee . p. 49. Retrieved August 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ " 'About Faces' Celebrates Portraiture, Preserve Interest in Ourselves" . Oakland Tribune . September 22, 1987. p. 32 (C-3). Retrieved August 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
Further reading
Blank, Chotsie; Beard, James (1982). California Artists Cook Book . Abbeville Press. ISBN 978-0896592469 . includes recipes by Lark.
Frueh, Joanna (January 2, 1979). "Chicago: Kathe Keller and Sylvia Lark". Art in America . ISSN 0004-3214 .
External links
International National Artists Other