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Nancy Edell (November 12, 1942 – June 9, 2005) was an American-born Canadian artist, best known for her rug hooking practice that pushed the boundaries between art and craft. Her practice included
animated film Animation is a method by which image, still figures are manipulated to appear as Motion picture, moving images. In traditional animation, images are drawn or painted by hand on transparent cel, celluloid sheets to be photographed and exhibited ...
, woodcut,
monotypes Monotyping is a type of printmaking made by drawing or painting on a smooth, non-absorbent surface. The surface, or matrix, was historically a copper etching plate, but in contemporary work it can vary from zinc or glass to acrylic glass. The i ...
and drawing which often expressed surrealist themes. Edell believed an artist’s work should be an expression of their personal experience. Her work was rooted in feminism and drew inspiration from her dreams, religion and politics. Her work is recognized for its dream-like qualities, art historical references, sensuality, sexuality, narrative and subversive wit.


Life and education

Nancy Edell was born in Omaha, Nebraska, on November 12, 1942. Edell obtained her Bachelor of Fine Arts in
printmaking Printmaking is the process of creating artworks by printing, normally on paper, but also on fabric, wood, metal, and other surfaces. "Traditional printmaking" normally covers only the process of creating prints using a hand processed techniq ...
and
contemporary dance Contemporary dance is a genre of dance performance that developed during the mid-twentieth century and has since grown to become one of the dominant genres for formally trained dancers throughout the world, with particularly strong popularity in ...
from the University of Nebraska Omaha in 1964. By the time Edell was in her 20s, she had lived in Los Angeles, California, Victoria, British Columbia, and then Bristol, England where she continued her cinematic works and studies. From 1968-1969, Edell studied film and animation at the University of Bristol. After Edell's brief time in England, she moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, where she worked in animation and lithography until 1980. In 1980, Edell moved from Manitoba to the small village of Bayswater, Nova Scotia, and discovered the traditional domestic craft of rug-hooking which changed her art practice dramatically. Edell became a Canadian citizen in 1981. In 1982, Edell began teaching part-time at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and continued working there until 2002. She was diagnosed with
non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), also known as non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, is a group of blood cancers that includes all types of lymphomas except Hodgkin lymphomas. Symptoms include enlarged lymph nodes, fever, night sweats, weight loss, and tiredness. ...
in the fall of 1999 and died on June 9, 2005. Edell was married to Peter Walker, and she also has a son, Gabriel Edell, a daughter-in-law, Sarah Maley Edell, and two grandchildren, Hyacinth Edell and Levon Edell.


Works


Film

In the early 1970s Nancy Edell was acclaimed as one of Canada's foremost animators, though she preferred to be considered an artist. Edell says that most of her early film work was a form of self-therapy, a response to growing up in the 1950s in Nebraska, the "rigid sex-roles" that defined her life and the violence she associated with sex.
"Dirty jokes were my basic childhood reference to sex. Sex is dirty, that kind of stuff. Men grabbing at women and leering. I was just working this out.”
Edell’s animation works were screened in numerous places throughout the world including Edinburgh,
Oberhausen Oberhausen (, ) is a city on the river Emscher in the Ruhr Area, Germany, located between Duisburg and Essen ( ). The city hosts the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen and its Gasometer Oberhausen is an anchor point of the European Rout ...
, Chicago, Amsterdam, Toronto, and Montreal. Edell won awards for her film work from festivals in Paris, France (1972), and Edinburgh, Scotland (1969) as well as the First Festival of Women's Films, New York City (1972), and the Canada Council. Edell had amination commissions from the BBC, CBC, and also Sesame Street. Her first two film aminations, ''Black Pudding'' and ''Charley Company'', were created using cut-out drawings and lithographic prints. The characters in these films were made from detailed drawings with moving parts that were filmed moving to create the animation. Edell moved away from work in film animation after the 1980s. However, residues of her animations can be seen in her still work through the "sequencing and fractured narrative structure" and the way she reused and repeated background images, as one would in cell animation.


Black Pudding (1969)

''Black Pudding'' (1969) was Edells’ first film which she directed, wrote, and animated. The video is 7 minutes long in colour film. It was created during her studies at Bristol University, in England. During this time, many adult-orientated animations were being produced in Europe which spoke to questions of sexuality and social norms. ''Black Pudding'' features "a giant vagina belch ngout strange, surrealistic, creatures in an endless stream". It is described as an “experimental...dark surrealist fantasy, full of bizarre often erotic imagery and feminist themes.” Edell herself explains the creating of Black Pudding as a "really gut things and I just spewed out everything I wanted to say". The name "Black Pudding" became over time, a reference to a woman’s insides and sexual organs. When Edell looked back on ''Black Pudding'' in an interview with Brian Clancey for Cinema Canada in 1976, she said she found the film embarrassing. "Now, when I look at it, it's embarrassing, because it's so crude. It's really raw stuff".


Charley Company (1972)

''Charley Company'' was Edell's second film and was created in 1972. It is a 9 min, colour animation. It was inspired by her feelings against war. The film featured a civilian army of sexual-sadistic civilian soldiers "walking up Uncle Sam’s ass". Jana Vosikovska, in the program for the film series ''Canadian Women Filmmakers'', describes these characters as " procession of fantastic creatures from the worlds of H. Bosch, R. Crumb and T. Dine". The film also features hermaphrodite-like characters, which Edell attributes to her interest in "dual aspects" and Siamese twins: when two things are joined together in impossible ways.


Lunch (1973)

Edell’s third film ''Lunch'', made in 1973, is a 4-minute colour animation. She received a grant from the BBC. ''Lunch'' is a film about a waiter, a chef, and the customers. The idea for the film was initially submitted by a BBC producer, and was about the contrast between the atmosphere of the dining hall and kitchen in a restaurant.


Rug Hooking

When Edell arrived in Nova Scotia in 1980, rug hooking was a deep part of Nova Scotian folk-culture since the 1850s, but it had not yet found a place within fine art. Her move to Nova Scotia signaled a pivotal turn in her work; she started to incorporate the medium of rug hooking into her work, creating a unique visual style. Edell's work with this medium mixes the traditional practices of rug hooking with controversial themes such as feminism, sexuality, and death. She used the narrative possibilities of this medium to express a dream-like quality with art historical references, sensuality, journeys and wit. "Using found wool rag (used clothing) and a traditional method of shrinking, she began to construct images that spoke of enclosed interior (indoor) spaces as related to the gender issue. She explores a socially-constructed gender that is developed through the use of myth (often Assyrian) and stereotype". Rug hooking and other domestic and often textile-based crafts, like quilting, knitting, sewing, and embroidery are often associated with the 'feminine arts'. Because of this association with femininity and the domestic, they were devalued within the male-dominated hierarchy of art. Edell, along with artists like Joyce Wieland, Kate Walker, Eva Hesse,
Jackie Winsor Vera Jacqueline Winsor (born October 20, 1941) is a Canadian-born American sculptor. Her style, which developed in the early 1970s as a reaction to the work of minimal artists, has been characterized as post-minimal, anti-form, and process art ...
, and Miriam Schapiro pushed the boundaries between craft and art in the 1960-80s. They argued the distinction between craft and art was a gendered one.
"Mat hooking aligned Edell with feminist artists of the time who were incorporating folk and craft elements into their fine art practices. It was a choice that established a gender position from which she developed the feminist utopia depicted in her ''Art Nuns'' rug-hooking series. With its scenes of a community of celibate women artists devoted to the creation and exploration of art, ''Art Nuns'' illustrates Edell's shift to a woman-centered vision. In the 1990s her hooked-rug works grew beyond the familiar format of the enclosed border which was typical of her earlier work. Edell’s final body of work has been described as cataclysmic and urgent, depicting pathological processes, micro-organisms and systems of medicine and biology — a response to the terminal cancer that would eventually take her life."


Exhibitions + Awards


Solo

* 1981, Nancy Edell, Art Gallery, Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. * 1984, Boudoir / Home Entertainment, Great George Street Gallery, Charlottetown, PEI. * 1985, Nancy Edell, Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge, Alberta. * 1986, Home Entertainment, Plug In Gallery, Winnipeg, Manitoba. * 1988, Nancy Edell, Omaha Art Gallery, Omaha, Nebraska. * 1989, Fragile Structures, Anna Leonowens Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia. * 1989, Nancy Edell, Galerie d’Art, Université de Moncton, Moncton, New Brunswick.


Group

Edell had her work in many group exhibitions, national and international.


Selected public collections

Her work is included in the following public collections, among others: * Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia * Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova Scotia * Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa, Ontario * Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg, Manitoba


Further reading

* * * *


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Edell, Nancy Canadian women artists 1942 births 2005 deaths Canadian textile artists Women textile artists University of Nebraska Omaha alumni Deaths from cancer in Nova Scotia Deaths from non-Hodgkin lymphoma Canadian experimental filmmakers Canadian animators