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Etta Winigrad papers, 1968-2019.

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https://colenda.library.upenn.edu/?_=1732630821223&f%5Bcollection_sim%5D%5B%5D=Etta+Winigrad+papers+%28University+of+Pennsylvania%29 Available online

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Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1273
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Format:
Other
Author/Creator:
Winigrad, Etta, 1936- creator.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Art.
Jewish art.
Jews--United States.
Jews.
United States.
Women artists--United States.
Women artists.
Sculpture.
Genre:
Manuscripts, American.
Color slides.
Correspondence.
Exhibition records.
Photographs.
Sketchbooks.
Sketches.
Penn Provenance:
Gifts of Etta Winigrad, 2016 and 2020.
Physical Description:
12 boxes (4.4 linear feet)
Arrangement:
Organized into 4 series: I. Correspondence, II. Notebook and sketches, III. Images of sculptures, and IV. Exhibition records.
Place of Publication:
1968-2019.
Biography/History:
Etta Winigrad is a sculptor who works primarily in clay and mixed media. She was born on July 25, 1936, the daughter of Herman and Lee (Vernekoff) Zuritsky, in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. On June 25, 1960, she married Dr. Allen J. Winigrad and together they have four sons: Michael A., David J., Jacob S., and Daniel J. Winigrad. Etta Winigrad attended Lower Merion High School in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, and earned a Bachelor of Applied Arts from the University Pennsylvania in 1958. She completed postgraduate study at Moore College in 1976 and at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, also in 1976. Etta Winigrad served as vice president of the Parkway Corporation, an auto parking and development firm in the Center City area of Philadelphia, with her mother and brother, Joseph S. Zuritsky. She was the treasurer of the Muse Gallery and Foundation from 1990 and was on the board of directors of the Clay Studio in Philadelphia from 2002. She was a member of the American Crafts Council, the International Sculpture Center, and the Woman's Caucus for Arts. Winigrad's figurative ceramic sculpture combines realistic and fantastical elements, animal-like figures, and humor. Her sculpture is influenced by primitive forms and surrealism, and addresses concerns of the human condition. Winigrad's work reflects her deep connection to Judaism and she created a sculpture addressing the Holocaust for the Jewish Federation of Central New Jersey, which won first prize among 100 entries submitted from around the world. She exhibits her ceramic sculpture at numerous galleries across the country and has commissioned work at the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia, among others. Several publications have featured Winigrad's sculpture. Winigrad has won awards from: the Art Association of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts, State College, Pennsylvania; Main Line Art Center, Pennsylvania; Abington Art Center, Jenkintown, Pennsylvania; and Pavilion Gallery, Memorial Hospital, Mt. Holly, New Jersey.
Summary:
The papers of Etta Winigrad show her process as an artist and her connection with various galleries and with the art community, as well as the business side of being an active artist. Etta Winigrad's correspondence includes communications with: art publications for the purchase of advertisements showing her work (the advertisements themselves, in publications such as ARTnews, are also included in this collection), authors and publishers regarding placement of her artwork in publications, collectors purchasing her work, slide registry organizations, and galleries at which she was interested in showing her work. Additionally, the correspondence includes communications regarding Winigrad as a teacher and student, and her connection to the art community. Also included are letters and notifications regarding her Bat Mitzvah, which took place on her 80th birthday in 2016. This collection also includes a number of notebooks and sketchbooks, which show plans for Winigrad's sculptures, both with regard to execution and details regarding dimensions and materials. A box of index-sized notecards provide information about each one of her pieces and to whom they have been sold. While most of the notebooks feature notes and sketches in pencil or black ink, the largest notebook in the collection features color illustrations as well as inlaid pages detailing plans for sculptures. There are a number of photographs of Winigrad's sculpture-- both on CD and DVD, as well as color and black-and-white prints and large-format negatives. Each of Winigrad's sculptural works is represented in a number of slides, which comprise the bulk of this collection. Some of the pieces represented are titled: Acrobats, Can't See the Forest for the Trees, Connections, The Dance Step, Easy Rider, Enjoy the Ride, Find Me, From the Top Down, Guardian II, Holocaust Memorial, In One Ear..., Lil' Man, Lost Words, Macho Macho, Meetin' in the Middle, Mom, Nature/Man, Night Flight, Transformation, Travelin' II, Untitled (Totem), Voyage, The Watcher, Whose House...?, Yes and No. Winigrad exhibited her work regularly and kept detailed exhibition records, which are included here. Exhibition records include correspondence with the galleries, as well as postcards and flyers for the exhibitions. Winigrad exhibited at a number of galleries in Philadelphia and across the US, including: The Clay Studio, Muse Gallery, the National Liberty Museum, and The Galleries of Texas Tech Art School.
OCLC:
982184987

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