Diane Itter Explained

Diane Itter
Birth Date:1946
Birth Place:Summit, New Jersey
Death Date:1989
Death Place:Bloomington, Indiana
Nationality:American
Spouse:William Itter
Education:University of Pittsburgh
Field:fiber artist

Diane Itter (4 October 1946 – 12 October 1989)[1] [2] was an American fiber artist. Her work emerged from the 1960s renaissance of interest in fiber art.

Life

While studying at the University of Pittsburgh, she met her future husband, artist William Itter, who encouraged her to experiment with hand-tied knots.[3] Itter used fine threads, small knots, and bright colors, whereas most fiber artists working at the time were producing large sculptural works from undyed fibers tied into large knots.[4] [5] Itter was inspired by historical textiles from Peru, Japan, and Africa.[6]

Itter had limited herself to brightly dyed thread and a single type of knot by 1974. Each work took her about one and one-half weeks of 8 to 10 hour workdays. In 1981, she developed carpal-tunnel syndrome. She slept with splints on her wrists, but continued to produce 20 to 30 intricate pieces annually, while continuing her teaching and lecturing schedule. She died from cancer in 1989.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies (Library of Congress). Congress. The Library of. id.loc.gov. 2020-04-29.
  2. Web site: Diane Itter. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Smithsonian Institution. 12 June 2017.
  3. Book: Itter, Diane. Diane Itter: a retrospective. Ilse-Neuman. Ursula. American Craft Museum (New York. N.Y.). Indianapolis Museum of Art. Indiana University. Bloomington. Art Museum. 1995-01-01. American Craft Museum. New York. 32915490. English.
  4. Web site: Museum of Art and Design . 2019-11-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160306032229/http://collections.madmuseum.org/code/emuseum.asp?emu_action=searchrequest&moduleid=2&profile=people&currentrecord=1&searchdesc=Diane%20Itter&style=single&rawsearch=constituentid%2F%2C%2Fis%2F%2C%2F600%2F%2C%2Ffalse%2F%2C%2Ftrue . 2016-03-06 . dead .
  5. Ilse-Neuman, Ursula, Diane Itter, A Retrospective, New York, American Craft Museum, 1995
  6. Book: Press, Nancy Neumann. Knots and nets. Brandford. Joanne Segal. Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art. New York State Museum. Parrish Art Museum. 1988-01-01. Office of Publications Services, Cornell University. Ithaca, N.Y.. 18844760. English.
  7. Web site: Museum of Art and Design . 2019-11-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160306032229/http://collections.madmuseum.org/code/emuseum.asp?emu_action=searchrequest&moduleid=2&profile=people&currentrecord=1&searchdesc=Diane%20Itter&style=single&rawsearch=constituentid%2F%2C%2Fis%2F%2C%2F600%2F%2C%2Ffalse%2F%2C%2Ftrue . 2016-03-06 . dead .