Hazel Larsen Archer

Hazel Larsen Archer
Born Hazel Frieda Larsen
(1921-04-23)April 23, 1921
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Died May 18, 2001(2001-05-18) (aged 80)
Tucson, Arizona
Nationality American
Education Black Mountain College
Known for Photography
design

Hazel Larsen Archer (April 23, 1921, Milwaukee, Wisconsin - May 18, 2001, Tucson, Arizona) was an American -born significant twentieth century female photographer who attended and then taught at Black Mountain College. Her images and prints captured life a Black Mountain and her art theory and teaching influenced major 20th century artists and personalities.

Life and work

Archer was born Hazel Frieda Larsen on April 23 1921[1] to Chris and Ella Larsen. She grew up with two brothers and a sister contracting polio at age 10. She studied at home until high school, which she negotiated with braces and crutches. In the spring of 1944, while at the University of Wisconsin, she saw a notice that German artist Josef Albers was offering summer courses in design and painting at Black Mountain College in North Carolina. It was the beginning of her long association with the experimental liberal arts college. After getting her degree at Wisconsin, she went back to Black Mountain where she was a student, teacher and registrar for the next nine years. Archer met her husband, Charles Archer, in Black Mountain. She left the college to have her only child, Erika Archer Zarow. Archer moved with her husband to Tucson, Arizona where she operated a free-lance photography studio. In 1963, she became director of adult education of the Tucson Art Center an organization that would become the Tucson Museum of Art.

Archer matriculating into Black Mountain College in the summer of 1944, she returned in 1945 to study with Josef Albers; during her years at Black Mountain College she also studied with Buckminster Fuller, Robert Motherwell, Walter Gropius, and the photographers Beaumont Newhall and Nancy Newhall. After graduation, she joined the faculty, and became the school’s first full-time teacher of photography in 1949.

The era during which Hazel Archer was at Black Mountain College is acknowledged by scholars as one of the college's peaks in terms of intellectual and artistic activity and synergistic, cross disciplinary innovation. The college (born out of the Bauhaus tradition) was transitioning from a predominantly European sensibility to one that was distinctly American. These years at Black Mountain College were the genesis for much of American culture in the second half of the twentieth century. She taught many significant students at the college including Robert Rauschenberg. Archer photographed life at the college and captured the everyday moments of the schools famous teachers and students.

Archer left Black Mountain College in 1953, as its longstanding financial problems began to overwhelm it, and married Charles Archer, who was a student there. They continued to live for several years in the town of Black Mountain, where she opened a studio and took mostly family portraits. In 1956, the year the college closed, she and her husband moved to Tucson, Arizona; she lived there until 1975, when she moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico. Though her work had been shown at the Museum of Modern Art and the Photo League in New York, she stopped exhibiting after 1957; she focused for the rest of her life on her work as an educator.

Archer died in Tucson, Arizona on May 18, 2001.

References

  1. "U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 [database on-line].". Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com (subscription required).

Vaughan, David (2006). Hazel Larsen Archer: Black Mountain College Photographer. Asheville, North Carolina: Black Mountain Press. 

The Associated Press (June 4, 2001). Santa Fe artist, teacher dies at 80. Amarillo, Texas: Amarillo Globe News. 

Cunningham, Merce (2005). Motion Studies: Hazel Larsen Archer at Black Mountain College. New York: Aperture. 

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.