|
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Morris Gallery
Adela Akers
Recent Works
January 10 through February 23, 1986
Gallery exhibitions are partially and generously
funded by a grant from the Philadelphia Foundation.
Artist Statement
Sea and Sky are inspiration to my work. My attraction to architecture
has something to do with my affinity with structure and my need
for order. Weaving combines structure and order and offers me the
best way to put together my visions.
Cross-country travel from California and trips to the Dominican
Republic and Puerto Rico marked the beginning of a change in my
work and a merge of experience and vision. The intensity of light
and color, the exuberance of the people, and the life style in the
islands brought to the present the time spent in Cuba where my formative
years were spent. Places where the air and water have a brilliance
greater than I have ever seen anywhere else. This intensity stimulates
the desire to invent intense color intervals. The sea always constant
and a presence in my work becomes a reflecting surface, a
mirror to the colors I see everywhere.
-Adela Akers
Checklist
A.M./PM., 1984
47 x 54 x 5"
Sisal, linen & wool
TROPICAL NIGHT, 1984
46 x 66 x 5" Sisal, linen & wool
PURPLE SEA, 1984
62 x 126 x 6" Sisal, linen & wool
DOUBLE IMAGE,1985
46 x 78 x 5" Sisal, linen & wool
DUNES,1985
46 x 78 x 5" Sisal, linen & wool
COMPOSTELA, 1985
60 x180 x 6"
Sisal, linen, wool & metallic thread
Artist Biography
Adela Akers was born in Santiago de Compostela,
Spain, in 1933, and spent her childhood in Cuba. In 1955,
she received a degree from the University of Havana. She studied
art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1957-60) and
at Cranbrook Academy of Art (1960-61, 1962-63). Before coming
to the Tyler School of Art, in 1972, where she now holds the
position of professor, Akers taught at the Cooper Square Art
Center, NY, the New School for Social Research, NY and the Penland
School of Crafts, NC.
She has received numerous fellowships and grants from Temple University as well as those from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts (1983), National Endowment for the Arts (1980, 1974, 1971), New Jersey State Council on the Arts (1971), and the Centas Foundation (1967-68, 1968-69). Her work is represented in many permanent collections, including those of the Museum of Contemporary Crafts, NY, Museum of Art, Providence, RI, and the Everson Museum, Syracuse, NY.
Solo Exhibitions (selected) Modem Master Tapestries,
NY, 1984; The Mandell Gallery, Los Angeles, 1981; The Triangle
Gallery, San Francisco, 1981; The Hadler Galleries, NY, 1977.
Group Shows (selected) Multiplicity in Clay-Metal-Fiber,
Skidmore College Invitational, 1984; Jacquard Textiles,
Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, and Cooper-Hewitt
Museum, NY, 1982; Fiber: Thread and Cloth Forms, Dayton
Art Institute, 1981; Fibers, Southeastern Center for Contemporary
Art, Winston-Salem, NC, 1980; 8 Artists, Philadelphia Museum
of Art, 1978; Fiberworks, International Invitational Exhibition,
Cleveland Museum of Art, 1977; National Crafts Exhibition, Kranert
Art Museum, University of Illinois, Urbana, 1976; Textiles:
Past & Prologue, Greenville County Museum, Greenville,
SC, 1976; Frontiers in Contemporary American Weaving, Lowe
Art Museum, University of Miami, 1976; Con-Tex-Ture, Invitational
Weaving Exhibition, Fort Wayne, IN, 1974; Objects: Made in U.S.A.,
School of Art Galleries, Kent State University, Kent, OH, 1973;
Pacesetters & Prototypes. Weavers: A Cranbrook Retrospective,
The Detroit Institute of Art, Detroit, MI, 1973; Forms Invitational,
Fiber/Clay/Metal, Fine Arts Gallery, State University College, Oneonta,
NY, 1971; Ceramics 70 Plus Woven Forms, Everson Museum
of Art, Syracuse, NY, 1970; Objects: USA, Johnson Wax Collection,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 1969; Experiencias
Artistico Textiles, International Exhibition of Textiles, Museum
of Contemporary Art, Madrid, Spain, 1969; Fourth National Invitational
Crafts Exhibition, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 1968, Michigan
Art Yesterday & Today, Flint Institute of Art, Flint, MI,
1963; Michigan Artists-Craftsmen, The Detroit Institute
of Art, Detroit, MI, 1963; Young Americans 1962, Museum
of Contemporary Crafts, New York City, 1962.
Bibliography (selected)
BOOKS
Battenfield, Jackie. IKAT, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold,
1980.
Creager, Clara. Weaving, New York: Doubleday, 1979.
Held, Shirley Weaving: A Handbook for the Fiber Artist,
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1980.
ARTICLES
Janeiro, Jan. "The Line as Movement, Adela Akers," Fiberarts 8 (March/April 1981): 70-72
Scheinman, Pamela. "Adela Akers: The Loomed Plane," Craft
Horizons 37 (February 1977): 24-25, 61-62.
The Morris Gallery displays the work of outstanding contemporary artists with
a connection to Philadelphia, determined by birth, schooling, or residence.The exhibitions are chosen by a committee composed of area artists, museum personnel and collectors, and the curatorial staff of the Academy. Currently serving on the Morris Gallery Exhibition Committee are: Cynthia Carlson, Bill Freeland, Ofelia Garcia, Dr. Helen Herrick, Jay Richardson Massey, Cheryl McClenney, John Moore, Eileen Rosenau, Mark Rosenthal; Academy staff Judith Stein, Morris Gallery coordinator, Frank Goodyear, Jr., Linda Bantel, Kathleen Foster, Betty Romanella; and Academy students Ed Lewis and Anna Yates.
Copyright, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 1986
Back to portal |