Adelie Landis Bischoff
Adelie Landis Bischoff (February 12, 1926 – July 23, 2019) was an American artist, and wife of artist Elmer Bischoff.
Adelie Landis Bischoff | |
---|---|
Born | Adelie Landis February 12, 1926 Brooklyn, New York |
Died | July 23, 2019 Berkeley, California |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Artist |
Years active | 1950s – 2010s |
Spouse | Elmer Bischoff (1962-1991) |
Early life
Adelie Landis was born and raised in Brooklyn, the daughter of Alexander Landis and Eva Paris Landis. She trained as a nurse at Mount Sinai Nursing School in the 1940s. She studied fine arts at the California School of Fine Arts in 1951 and 1952,[1] working with Elmer Bischoff, David Park and Hassel Smith. She earned a master of fine arts degree in painting at the University of California, Berkeley in 1959.[2]
Career
Adelie Landis worked as a psychiatric nurse at McLean Hospital from 1947 to 1948, before she moved to California to pursue a career in art.[2] Landis Bischoff was considered an artist of the San Francisco Abstract Expressionist movement,[3] but she also worked in the Bay Area Figurative Movement.[4][5][6] "I never got into the drip and blob," she later said of expressionism. "I think it took more nerve than I had at the time."[2] Landis Bischoff's work was exhibited in San Francisco and New York in 2006,[4][7] in Belmont in 2012,[5][8] and included in a 2014 show, "Beauty Fierce as Stars, Groundbreaking Women Painters 1950s and Beyond" in Berkeley, California.[9]
Landis Bischoff's home was burned in the Oakland firestorm of 1991.[10][11] The fire destroyed thousands of her and her late husband's drawings, photographs, notebooks, and diaries. "It was a kind of epiphany. I felt a surge of freedom to just leave it, to walk out and leave everything," she recalled later.[2] She built a new home in Oakland, designed by architect Stanley Saitowitz,[12] and continued painting and exhibiting new works into her late eighties.[1]
Personal life and legacy
Adelie Landis married fellow artist Elmer Nelson Bischoff in 1962.[13] Their son, David Bischoff, became a sculptor and writer. She was widowed when Elmer died from cancer in 1991; she died in 2019, aged 93 years, in Berkeley. Works by Adelie Landis Bischoff are held in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art,[14] the Library of Congress,[15] Bryn Mawr College, and the University of California Art Museum.[5]
References
- "Adelie Landis Bischoff, 1926-2019; Alumni Donor Spotlight" San Francisco Art Institute.
- Salvesen, Magda; Cousineau, Diane (2005). Artists' Estates: Reputations in Trust. Rutgers University Press. pp. 61–68. ISBN 978-0-8135-3604-0.
- Yau, John (2012-04-29). "Can We Still Learn To Speak Martian?". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- "Adelie Landis Bischoff". Charles Campbell Gallery, San Francisco, CA. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- "Adelie Landis Bischoff: Then and Now, Mark Bischoff: Sculptures - Belmont, CA at Wiegand Gallery". SanJose.com. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- Jones, Caroline A.; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; San Francisco Museum of Art; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (1990). Bay Area Figurative Art, 1950-1965. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-06842-1.
- Berkson, Bill. Adelie Landis Bischoff (exhibit catalog, Salander-O'Reilly Galleries, New York 2006).
- "Adelie Landis Bischoff – Then and Now". Marian's Blog. 2012-04-05. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- "Beauty Fierce as Stars". Painters' Table. 2014-05-21. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- Marech, Rona (2001-11-16). "Followers pay respects to Berkeley artist Bischoff". SFGate. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- "Artists' Homes Destroyed". The San Francisco Examiner. 1991-10-22. p. 43. Retrieved 2019-12-26 – via Newspapers.com.
- Sardar, Zahid (1996-09-22). "Spatial Geometry; An Artist's Loft with a De Stijl Heart Rises in the Oakland Hills". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 218. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- Landauer, Susan; Bischoff, Elmer; Oakland Museum; Orange County Museum of Art (Calif.); Norton Museum of Art (2001-10-30). Elmer Bischoff: The Ethics of Paint. University of California Press. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-520-23042-2.
- Adelie Landis Bischoff, SFMOMA.
- "[Untitled] / A. Landis '52". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
External links
- Adelie Landis Bischoff at askART.
- Elmer Bischoff Papers, 1914-1990, in the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.