Eleanor Spiess-Ferris

Eleanor Spiess-Ferris (July 3, 1941 - ) is an American symbolist painter[1] cited as a significant surrealist,[2][3] narrative figurative and feminist artist.[4][5] Her numerous visual works display powerful influences of the Spanish and Native American cultures of Northern New Mexico, where she grew up. They often reference Penitentes (New Mexico), retablos, Kachinas and Native American fetishes and frequently incorporate themes of feminist spirituality,[3][5][6] Indo-European mythology and personal memory.[7][8]

Eleanor Spiess-Ferris celebrates opening her show, Ophelia's Garden at Printworks Chicago Gallery, December, 2012.

Life

Spiess-Ferris was born on July 3, 1941 in Las Vegas, New Mexico and raised on a small farm there. Her mother, Harriette descended from early Spanish settlers in the territory. Her father, Waldo Spiess, was an attorney of German/Irish/Mexican heritage who became Chief Justice of the New Mexico Appellate Court.[5][9] She earned her BFA at University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and attended Chicago Art Institute.[9] She married Chicago artist and toy designer Mike Ferris (b. 1938– d. 2000), in 1962. They had two children, artist Emile Marie Ferris and Michael Ferris, Jr., a New York sculptor married to New York artist Rosemarie Fiore. She and her husband lived briefly in Albuquerque and returned to Chicago in the late 1960s.[9][10]

Work

Spiess-Ferris has created a large body of widely shown works in oil, gouache and conti crayon over a span of more than four decades, and have included ceramics in her later period.[1][9][10] She populates her visual landscapes with human forms – often women, often truncated or morphed – integrated with vividly rendered, precise images of animals, plants and natural phenomena.[1][2][3] Her works evoke and blend mythological, spiritual, psychological, environmental and feminist themes in dreamlike contexts.[2][3][5] She draws deeply on her childhood in the high country of northern New Mexico - its landscape and ethnic cultures - where, as youngest of four siblings, she spent much of her playtime alone, exploring her parents’ overgrown apple and plum orchard, observing transformative cycles of life.[5][6] She plays with the ideas of Symbolist art by morphing figures of women into roots, trees, leaves and birds, yet diverts from them, keeping her figures subconsciously distant, always in the process of formation and evolution.[6][8][11] Her work integrates elements of surrealism, symbolism and expressionism and cites Hieronymus Bosch, Paul Delvaux and James Ensor among disparate artists who have influenced her artistic development.[1][2][7] Spiess-Ferris is a Figure Painting and Drawing instructor on the faculty of The Art Center of Evanston Illinois.[12] Her works include poetry and short fiction much in the same surrealist-narrative vein as her visual art.[9][13] She has received numerous major art awards and citations including Artist-in-Residence grants at Anchor Graphics and Paper Press, Chicago, Illinois Arts Council Fellowship Grant and a Vielehr Award from Art Institute of Chicago.[9]

Major exhibitions

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Yood, James, Artforum International, reviews Zaks Gallery, September, 1991
  2. 1 2 3 4 Marcus, Stanley, Exploring Imaginary Subjects, Watercolor ’88, American Artist Magazine, 1998
  3. 1 2 3 4 Lauter, Estella (1984). Women as Mythmakers: Poetry and Visual Art by Twentieth-Century Women. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253115027.
  4. Enstice, Wayne; Peters, Melody (1996). Drawing: Space, Form and Expression (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 9780133046434.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Eleanor Spiess-Ferris: An Artist’s Journey" – Charles Wustum Museum – Racine, Wisconsin – essay by Estella Lauter
  6. 1 2 3 Krantz, Ed, Sketches, Orchards and Dark Ponds, Safety-Kleen Gallery One, Elgin Community College, Elgin, Illinois.
  7. 1 2 Holg, Garret, Eleanor Spiess-Ferris, Symbolism, College of Lake County article
  8. 1 2 Wright, Robert T., The Magpie Chronicles, College of Lake County, Illinois
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Eleanor Spiess-Ferris". Official website. Retrieved March 28, 2013.
  10. 1 2 "Michael Ferris Jr.". Official website. Retrieved March 28, 2013.
  11. Catalog and introduction, Fecundity, Packer Schopf Gallery, Chicago, 2013
  12. Evanston Art Center
  13. Light Fantastic Books

External links

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