Edith Vonnegut

“My aim is to rewrite the history of women as I think we have been portrayed incorrectly from Eve on. I'm here to herald the unheralded and bring majesty to the mundane. I'm also working on some politically charged paintings regarding the trashing of our planet.  I've always painted angels, though that's a mystery as I was raised agnostic bordering on atheist but have a sneaking feeling there is more to this world than meets the eye.  I am more of an illustrator than a painter and proud of it. I begged my parents to send me to apprentice with Norman Rockwell but he was not taking students. Then I begged them to send me to Italy to study with the masters, but they told me they were all dead so I dropped in and out of multiple art schools and consider myself self taught by getting too close to masterpieces in museums and studying books with titles like 'Painting Techniques of the Masters'.  I want to make paintings that are beautiful, with humor and are about something. My mediums are oil on linen or lately, gouache on antique wallpaper.” Edith Vonnegut was born in 1949 in Schenectady, New York. She studied art at The Boston Museum School of Fine Arts and the School of Visual Arts at the University of Iowa. Edith is the daughter of Kurt Vonnegut, a celebrated American author known for his satirical and darkly humorous novels that blended science fiction, humor and social commentary. “He’s contributed so many helpful writings
that never get old and continue to bring comfort to humans, making them feel less alone and making them laugh . . . and cry . . . as we should in these
times. I can’t think of any other father who would have been better.”

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Dan Boylan