Ruth Leaf Explained

Ruth Leaf
Birth Date:January 7, 1923
Birth Place:New York, New York
Death Place:Venice, California
Education:New School for Social Research, the Art Students League, and Atelier 17
Field:Printmaking

Ruth Leaf (January 5, 1923 – April 17, 2015) was an American artist and a pioneer in the discipline of printmaking,[1] specifically etching. She studied at the New School for Social Research, Art Students League of New York and Brooklyn College, and Atelier 17.[2] While fluent in the methods of woodcut, linoleum, monotype, collagraph and collage,[3] she is most known for her viscosity etchings. Born in New York City, she spent many years teaching in Long Island before moving to Venice, California where she lived until her death in 2015.

Leaf had a long and prolific career; teaching and exhibiting work until her late eighties and producing work up until her death. Her work is included in the collections of The Library of Congress, New York University, Columbia University, Ohio's Butler Institute of American Art and Connecticut's Slater Museum. She authored the book Intaglio Printmaking Techniques (Watson-Guptil Publications) in 1976 while teaching at her namesake studio in Long Island, and it remains the textbook used today in many schools.

Notes and References

  1. News: Mayer. Sondra. Retrospective Exhibition at Queens Museum. Long Island Heritage. September 1981.
  2. Web site: Weyl. Christina. Networks of Abstraction: Postwar Printmaking and Women Artists of Atelier 17. Archives of American Art. 3 October 2015.
  3. News: Braff. Phyllis. Bending Paper Into a Complex Modern Medium. Sunday, March 16, 1986. New York Times. March 16, 1986.