ABOUT
ELIZABETH WEINER-COHEN ART
Ms. Cohen has been practicing her art for many years. Her fascination
with painting began when she was a child and up until recently she
worked primarily in water colors and oils.
Ms. Cohen spent her college years majoring in art at Douglass College,
Rutgers University in New Jersey and graduate school at the University
of California at Berkeley. While at Berkeley, she earned her Masters
of Art and also her teaching credential.
Following her education, she traveled to Australia. While in Australia
she worked and lived with Aboriginal people. During her teaching
in the Northern Territory of Australia, she was drawn to the arts
of the tribal people of the top end of Australia. She attempted to
combine her aesthetic with the colors and symbolism of the Aborigines.
After seven years, Ms. Cohen returned to the U.S.A. and became involved
with images of the sea. Her paintings from this series then evolved
into a study of women in mythology and now in her later years the
crone in mythology. These paintings also included visual aspects
of her dreams and events from her past. Some evoked nostalgia for
items from her childhood, including pieces of fabric and dolls that
she has saved.
Most
recently, this work has moved her to create fabric art – primarily
a series of dolls.
Through her dolls she is once again visiting
her love of tribal art and the world of mythology. These fabric sculptures
are reminiscent of the Venus of Willendorf, and African, and Latino
style dolls.
In a sense she is trying to create a world inhabited by dolls that
can bridge time and culture. She uses fabrics that she has collected
over the years from various parts of the world and also recyclable
materials. The meshing of found, modern materials with fabric from
other cultures gives the impression that the dolls could be artifacts
from any number of civilizations.
In fact,
Ms. Cohen’s latest project is to make a dolls’ world.
Inhabited by her creatures, it is a world
where texture and fiber are highly valued.
Sewing and weaving are skills much admired and
threads are the new gold. She invites you
into this new found world to enjoy and
have fun touching and looking.
|