- Jann Haworth
Jann Haworth is an American
artist andsculptor . She was born in 1942 and raised inHollywood . She learned to sew at an early age from her mother, Miriam Haworth, a distinguishedceramist , print-maker and painter, and it is this skill, together with her inside experience of film-making, that gives her work its unique character.Early career
In 1961, after two years at
UCLA , she traveled toEngland , where she studied at theCourtauld Institute and theSlade .She first exhibited at the 1963 ICA 'Four Young Artists' show, in
London . These early cloth sculptures predate the work of Claes Oldenburg.London Pop Art movement and Sergeant Pepper
Jann Haworth became a leading member of the British Pop Art Movement in the 1960s, and almost its only female member.cite book | author = Gablik, Suzi; Russell, John | title = Pop Art Redefined | publisher = Thames & Hudson | location = London | year = 1969 | isbn = 0-500-18094-6 | accessdate = 2007-11-04] cite book | author = White, Patricia; Lucie-Smith, Edward | title = Art in Britain, 1969-70 | publisher = Dent | location = London | year = 1970 | isbn = 0-460-03888-5 | accessdate = 2007-11-04] She mounted solo exhibitions at the Robert Fraser Gallery ('66 and '69), Gallerie 20 in Amsterdam ('66), Studio Marconi in Milan ('68), and Sidney Janis in New York ('71). In 1967 she co-designed the iconic
Sgt. Pepper LP cover forthe Beatles with her then-husband, Peter Blake. In the '70s she and Blake were members of the group of artists known as theBrotherhood of Ruralists .cite book | author = Usherwood, Nicholas | title = The Brotherhood of Ruralists: Ann Arnold, Graham Arnold, Peter Blake, Jann Haworth, David Inshaw, Annie Ovenden, Graham Ovenden | publisher = Lund Humphries in association with the London Borough of Camden | location = London | year = 1981 | isbn = 0-85331-446-2 | accessdate = 2007-11-04] In 1979 she founded and ran The Looking Glass School nearBath, Somerset , an arts and crafts primary and middle school.Looking Glass School and book illustration
In 1979 she separated from Blake and commenced living with her present husband, the writer Richard Severy. During the subsequent two decades her artistic career took second place to her commitment to raising a young family (2 daughters, 3 stepdaughters, and a son), but she still found time to illustrate (as Karen Haworth) six of Severy's books (Mystery Pig, 1983, Julia MacRae Books, London; Unicorn Trap 1984, Julia Macrae Books, London; Rat's Castle, 1985, Julia MacRae Books, London; High Jinks, 1986, Julia MacRae Books, London; Burners and Breakers, 1987, Dragon Books, Collins Publishing Group, London, and Sea Change 1987, Dragon Books, Collins Publishing Group, London). She also created five covers for the Methuen Arden Shakespeare edition of 1981 ("Richard III", "
Macbeth ", "Twelfth Night ", "Henry the Fifth", and "Coriolanus"), and mounted two solo shows at Gimpel Fils Gallery, London ('93 and '95). She also continued as head of the Looking Glass School and authored three 'How to' art books for children: Paint (1993, Merehurst), Collage (1994, Merehurst), and Painting and Sticking (with Miriam Haworth, 1995, Merehurst)Return to America and new work
In 1997 she was granted a special Robert Fraser award by the Churchill Fellowship to study American quilt making and returned to America, to live at Sundance, Utah, where she founded the Art Shack Studios and Glass Recycling Works, and co-founded the Sundance Mountain Charter School (now the Soldier Hollow Charter School). Since then, she has re-established her career with a solo show at the Mayor Gallery, London ('06), and forthcoming solo exhibitions at the Galerie du Centre, Paris ('08), Salt Lake City Library Gallery ('08), and 'Women in Pop – Beyond the Surface', Philadelphia 2010, (University of the Arts: 2007-05-17). She has also been represented in important recent Pop Art group shows: Pop Art UK, Galeria Civica di Modena, Italy (2004); Art and the '60s, Tate Britain (2004); British Pop, Museo del Bellas Artes de Bilbao, Spain, (2005); Pop Art and Politics in the Sixties Wolverhampton, England (2007), and 'This is Pop' International Pop Art 1956-1968, Rome (2007).
Sergeant Pepper mural
In 2004 she conceived and co-created SLC PEPPER, a 50 x 30 foot mural in Salt Lake City, Utah, representing an updated version of the Sgt. Pepper record cover with stencil graffiti heads of over 75 new 'heroes', correcting the gender and ethnic biases of the original. This was a collaborative project involving over 30 artists. [cite web |url=http://www.slcpepper.org/slc_pepper/About.htm |title= ABOUT |accessdate= 2007-10-22 |quote= In its first incarnation the mural will create images of up to 100 people by as many 30 artists of all ages. ]
Representations of work
Public collections
Jann Haworth's work is represented in the following public collections:
* The Arts Council of Great Britain
* Hirshorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institute, Washington DC
* Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA
* Museum Folkwang, Ludwig Collection, Essen, Germany
* São Paulo Museum of Modern Art, Brazil
* Bernado Collection, Sintra Museum of Modern Art de Belem, Lisbon, Portugal
* Pallant House Gallery, West Sussex, EnglandBooks
She is referenced in the following published works:
* "Image as Language", Christopher Finch (1969, Pelican)
* "Goodbye Baby and Amen" by David Bailey and Peter Evans, 1969, Coward-McCann Inc. New York, p 44
* "Pop Art Re-defined" by John Russell and Suzi Gablik, 1969, Frederick A Praeger Inc. New York, plates 11, 43 and 126.
* "Pop Art: An Illustrated Dictionary" by Jose Pierre (1977, Eyre Methuen).
* "The Brotherhood of Ruralists", Nicholas Isherwood (1981, Lund Humphries, London) pp 42, 49/50 and 65
* "Pop Art", Tilman Osterwold (1989, Cosmo Press, Cologne) p 42
* "Pop Art, A Continuing History", Marco Livingstone (1990, Thames and Hudson, London) pp 166, 168/9, 257/8, 236-238
* "Blinds and Shutters", Michael Cooper and Bryan Roylance (1990, Genesis, Guildford, England) pp 53, 55, 58, 114, 188, 238/9, 262/3 and 267.
* "Walker Art Center – Painting and Sculpture from the Collection", Martin L Friedman (Rizzoli International Publications 1990)
* "Summer of Love", George Martin (1994, Macmillan, London)
* "Small Histories : Studies of Western Art", N P James (CV Publications, 2007)Exhibition catalogues
She is referenced, inter alia, in the following Exhibition Catalogues:
* "Sharp Focus Realism", Sidney Janis Gallery, New York, 1972, p13
* "Pop 60's Transatlantic Crossing", 1997, Centro Cultural de Belem, Portugal, pp156/7
* "Pop Art UK 1956-72", Modena, Italy 2004, Essay by Robert Melville pp 102 and 179, plates 103 and 105.
* "Art and the Sixties: This was Tomorrow", Tate Britain, 2004, pp 13, 25, 137 and plate 24.
* "British Pop", Museo de Bellas Artes, Bilbao, Spain, 2005 pp 422 and 466, plates 163, 167 and 171.
*" Artist's Cut: Jann Haworth", Mayor Gallery, Cork Street, London, 2006 (essays by Marco Livingstone and Christopher Finch)
* "Pop Art 1956-1968", Roma, Scuderie del Quirinale, a cura di Walter Guadagnini, pp140 and291, and plate 32References
*
External links
* [http://www.galerie-du-centre.net/w/ Galerie du Centre, Paris]
* [http://www.artnet.com/ Mayor Gallery, London]
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