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May 20, 1988 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-05-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Sculptress Looks 'Inside'
To Create Her Pieces

VICKI DIAZ

Special 7b The Jewish News

A

concern for gesture

and inner expression
characterizes the uni-
que art of Joyce Gottlieb of
West Bloomfield, whose work
is exhibited this month at the
Farmington Hills Public
Library. Her sculpture and
sketches can also been seen at
Eastern Michigan Universi-
ty's graduate school, and in a
number of area private collec-
tions. The work on display at
the library — a patinaed cast
stone relief of a reclining
nude figure, and several char-
coal sketches — reveal an ar-
tist with a marked sensitivi-
ty for the essence of the
human face and figure.
"Any model I work with, I
try to find their vibes," says
Gottlieb. "That's what I want
to capture."
Recently, the .50-year-old
mother of three received
Eastern Michigan Universi-
ty's coveted Purchase Award
for a wall relief executed in
hydrostone, along with the
Detroit Palette and Brush
Club Award for another work
of sculpture, entitled "Bar-
' tiara," done in terra cotta.
Gottlieb, who displayed a
strong interest in and talent
for art while a student at
Detroit's Mumford High
School pursued art as a career
only recently. For nearly 20
years, she worked as a dental
hygienist in the Detroit area,
until a bout with cancer and
a series of chemotherapy
treatments forced a rather
dramatic change in her
career and lifestyle 12 years
ago.
Not one for sitting on the
sidelines, Gottlieb signed up
for a few classes in drawing

and sculpture at Oakland
Community College. Before
long, the down-but-not-out ar-
tist had gone on to the Center
for Creative Studies, then to
Wayne State University and,
finally, to Eastern Michigan
University where she studied
with noted sculptor, John
Pappas, and earned a
graduate degree in fine arts,
specializing in sculpture.
Soon, her work began to ap-
pear in various exhibits
around town, including the
Michigan Sculpture Guild
Exhibit, the Scarab Club's
25th anniversary show, the
Helen DeRoy Annual Com-
petition in Farmington Hills,
and the Michigan Gallery
Show.
"I had found what I really
liked to do," she says.

Gottlieb, who describes her
work as mostly representa-
tional, credits much of her
success to the influence of
Pappas ("The first time I saw
his work, I knew he was the
one I wanted to study
under"), and a grueling work
schedule she's set up for
herself. On Monday nights,
she sketches with a group of
fellow artists at a studio in
Pontiac; Tuesdays are set
aside for sculpture sessions
with another group at a
studio in East Detroit;
Thursdays she sketches with
artists in Huntington Woods.
Saturdays are spent at the
Michigan Gallery on
Michigan Ave. in Detroit, or
at a session at the Orchard
Ridge campus of Oakland
Community College. Between
times, she's hard at work at a
clay studio set up at home in
her basement, or in an
upstairs drawing studio,
recently converted from a
bedroom.

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