“I didn't really take charge of my career until middle age."
Edna Andrade
Edna Andrade
Fifteen months before her death in 2008 the 89
year old Philadelphia artist Edna Andrade told The Philadelpia
Inquirer’s Amy Rosenberg "Right now, I have not been able to work and
I don't have any ideas. I have been busy as a bird dog trying to get rid of my
stuff, and trying to get ready to die. I made more money this year than I ever
made. I think people are finally catching up with me… I didn't sell a lot of
this stuff when I did it. Now people are collecting it."
For the best part of 50 years Andrade lived and
worked in Philadelphia as and artist and educator. Anne d'Harnoncourt
the director of The Philadelphia Museum of Art described her as "a
thoughtful artist whose taste was always interesting, and whose support
and encouragement of younger artists was absolutely terrific. I always
thought of her not only as a remarkable painter and a wonderful teacher
but as a real-life force in the city."
Andrade concurred
up a point saying “the city has been very good to me, though many times,
especially during the op art decades, I felt like a community of one… I
was about the only one doing that in Philadelphia. But I was not ready to move
to New York and wait on tables. I would have wound up an old waitress - not an
old artist."
And it is her op art works that
Andrade is best remembered for. As the Philadelphia
Inquirer’s Edward J. Sozanski wrote “Ms.
Andrade's approach is distinctive for its gentle, luminous palette and
lush, poetic lyricism. One doesn't expect to find such qualities, and
even occasional whimsicality, in Euclidean rigor.”
About her work
Andrade has said "It's not like showing your emotion. It was very cool
art. It's a decision to be totally visual. A story doesn't go with it."
And about her 1964 painting Color Motion 4-64 (see above) she added “The
scientists, they loved it. They understood some of the geometry of it."
It was after her
divorce from her architect husband in 1960 that Andrade’s work began to flourish.
As she has said "I think I would not have accomplished as much if I'd
stayed married, I was playing second fiddle, doing drafting work.”
Whilst initially being
influenced by the Bauhaus in general and Josef Albers in particular,
her travels to India and Japan also had a marked effect upon her work with Islamic architecture’s mathematically
determined decorative patterns becoming a major point of interest.
As Anne R.
Fabbri wrote in her review
of Andrade’s 2007 Woodmere Art Museum’s exhibition, “You look at Andrade’s
designs, colors and images and feel as if, somehow, the music of the spheres
has changed to an upbeat tempo. She introduces you to patterns you never
noticed before, finding them in nature, in colors and in all the forms that
create our world. You feel as if your eyes have been opened to a new universe.”
Her latest exhibition Edna
Andrade: Astrologer's Garden is
currently on show at Philadelphia’s
Locks Gallery until the 27th of June.
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