Mary Fuller (sculptor) explained

Mary Fuller McChesney
Other Names:Joe Rayter, Melissa Franklin
Birth Date:20 October 1922
Birth Place:Wichita, Kansas, U.S.
Death Place:Petaluma, California, U.S.
Occupation:Sculptor and art historian
Spouse:Robert McChesney

Mary Fuller McChesney (October 20, 1922 – May 4, 2022) was an American sculptor and art historian. She was a 1975 National Endowment for the Arts fellow.[1]

Early life and education

McChesney was born to Robert Fuller and Karen Rasmussen on October 20, 1922, in Wichita, Kansas and grew up in Stockton, California after moving there at age two with her family.[2] She attended the University of California, Berkeley, where she studied philosophy with Paul Marhenke.

Leaving before graduating, she became a welder in the Richmond, California shipyard, during World War II, and potter at California Faience.

Career

She started a ceramics business of her own, along with her partner Avrum "Bill" Rubenstein: "Two Fish Pottery". She held her first solo art show, of paintings and clay sculptures, Artists’ Guild Gallery (an artists’ co-op) in San Francisco. Through her association with The Artists' Guild Gallery, she became acquainted with a wide variety of her contemporary artists, including Hassel Smith, Ed Corbett, Emmy Lou Packard, Robert P. McChesney, George Goya, John Hultbert, Clyfford Still, and Ad Reinhardt.

She married Robert McChesney in December 1949;[3] they lived in the North Bay area.[4] They moved to Sonoma Mountain in Sonoma County near Petaluma, California in 1952, after living in Mexico for a year, and lived and worked there through Robert McChesney's death in 2008, after which Mary remained there, continuing to work, until the late 2010s. During their time in Guadalajara, Mexico, she began writing seriously, publishing a story in "New Story," and embarking upon writing mystery novels, publishing her first in 1953. She also began writing articles for Art Digest, then for Artforum.[5]

She experimented with different sculpture formats, including wood and stone, before developing the cement mixed with vermiculite that she used for the majority of her work. She received her first public art commission for a work in Salinas, followed by her work for San Francisco General Hospital and many subsequent commissions.

Fuller died at an assisted living facility in Petaluma, California on May 4, 2022, at the age of 99.[6] [7] The research materials for her books are held at the Archives of American Art.

List of public artwork

Writing

Under pen-names:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mary Fuller – Statement/Biography. March 20, 2016.
  2. Web site: Oral history interview with Mary Fuller McChesney, 1994 Sept. 28 . Archives of American Art. March 30, 2022.
  3. Web site: It's All About the Apple, Or is it? – Native Visions. March 20, 2016.
  4. News: It's a colorful life / Robert McChesney, Mary Fuller celebrate art and their marriage with a joint show. May 31, 2002. M.V. Wood. The San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. Web site: Artists Robert and Mary Fuller McChesney – Fifty Years on Sonoma Mountain – The Arts in the North Bay, CA. March 20, 2016.
  6. News: Risen . Clay . 2022-06-28 . Mary Fuller McChesney, Bay Area Artist and Historian, Dies at 99 . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-06-29 . 0362-4331.
  7. Web site: Mary Fuller McChesney . Calabi Gallery . November 29, 2009 . 18 May 2022.