Early years
Alexandra Eldridge was born in Mountainside, New Jersey and spent her childhood in a large Victorian house as one of seven children of Harry Devlin and Wende Devlin, who wrote and illustrated 27 children's books and collaborated on two nationally syndicated comic strips: Fullhouse, which was based on the life of their busy household; and Raggmopp, which told the family's story through their dog's eyes.Lynn Cline.''Isolation in Europe unifies art and life'', p. 26. The New Mexican, August 21, 2006. Eldridge's parents were both portrait painters and Harry wrote and illustrated books on American architecture.Golgonooza
Eldridge attended Ohio University, where she was in the Honors Cutler Program majoring in fine arts and creative writing and graduated summa cum laude. In 1969, she married her art professor, Aethelred Eldridge, and settled into a 70-acre farm near Athens, Ohio that was based on the writings, teachings and philosophy of Romantic-era poet and painterSanta Fe
In 1987, following her divorce, she moved to Santa Fe to raise her children and pursue her career in art with studies at the Santa Fe Institute of Fine Art and workshops in Florence, Cambridge, and New York. She continues to reside in Santa Fe.Influences
Eldridge has described her work as metaphorical and mytho-poetic. She says she is influenced by mysticism and has adopted many of Blake's views of spirituality and its connection to art. She has also cited influences such as Carl Jung, the poetry ofStyle
Eldridge works in mixed media on paper or panel. She uses Venetian plaster and creates images with pigment, pencil, and elements of collage. She rarely uses paint, instead she scratches through layers of the plaster to make lines. She burnishes the final layer to make the work shine and reveal the colors beneath. The colorful surfaces are distressed and incised with symbols, words, phrases and collage. Eldridge has said her paintings have a narrative, but without a beginning or end. Eldridge has described the process as an attempt to seek the unknown, "to go deeply in to the heart of the mystery, to make the soul fly out of things. I’ll go into the studio and begin. I may be in some curious state of being. I'll paint for a number of hours, and then, all of a sudden it reveals itself to me -- what's going on with me. Tears start coming up and all the other strong feelings. All this conspires and works together. I'm in a state of joy -- near ecstasy -- when I'm painting. Art is about an encounter with something -- whether it be the unseen, an emotion, a feeling -- and then you have to have the courage to collaborate with that. My work also has a lot to do with the need to sensually connect to another or to my own deepest regions. Love motivates me enormously."Evan West. ''Finding Blake in the Symbology of Alexandra Eldridge'', p. 7. The Bachelor, February 1999.Symbolism
Eldridge has been credited with creating her own vocabulary of symbols. Ordinary objects like birthday cakes, rabbits, ladders, and eggs often appear in her works. After the death of close friend in 2011, Eldridge said she found significance an image of a triptych of ladders. “Each ladder came into being as a revelation to me, each offering a deeper understanding of self-exploration, of death, of rebirth, and of the existence of eternity.” After spending three-weeks in India, she returned to Santa Fe where a friend was dying from a terminal illness. “I spent three weeks in India --- slowing down, getting very still. Boats and water appeared in my painting when I returned. I see the boats as symbols of being guided on the waters of the collective unconscious. There is a watery feeling to the work in the technique as well as in the images. Everything is dissolving as the new self insists on being born.” Although her images are infused with meanings, Eldridge has said, "It is tempting, perhaps even comforting, to want to nail images down with meaning. But that can kill an image's ability to grow and to instruct.” Eldridge says much of her work is spontaneous. "It's amazing how much the unconscious is always at play. This self-discovery is always going on. This stuff comes through and then you stand back and you look and say, 'Look at who you are now.'"Travel
Eldridge has said travelling is an important part of her creative process. She has had artist residencies on the Island of Elba, Italy and the Valparaiso Foundation in Almeria, Spain. While spending a month in Paris, she said she took on the role of a wanderer. “I came to see that this sensibility of the ‘aimless stroller’---vigilant, alert, with no destination, moving easily from the interior to the exterior worlds---was my sensibility.”. ''Previews'', p. 7. The Magazine, September 2011. During her time in Paris, she was invited to paint a mural in the city’s 17th century Palace des Vosges. While elements of her travels appear in her work, Eldridge says she does not paint pictures of foreign lands. Rather, her images are of inner landscapes, to look at her paintings is as if to interrupt a fairy tale or dream. Often, parts of the places she visits emerge in her work. For example, when she was staying in a medieval monastery on the Island of Elba off the coast of Italy, she mixed the beach’s black sand into the plaster of one painting. In Morocco, she bought pigments at a marketplace and stirred them into a new work. Other bits of Morocco began to appear in her work in the colors of pink and red, as well as the inclusion of old doors.Acclaim
Eldridge has had dozens of solo exhibitions and participated in many group shows throughout the United States and abroad, including New York, Paris, Belgrade and London. Her work has been used on covers of eight books of poetry. Celebrity collectors include actorsReferences
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Eldridge, Alexandra 1948 births Living people 20th-century American painters 21st-century American painters Artists from Santa Fe, New Mexico American women painters 20th-century American women artists 21st-century American women artists