Edith Robinson Wyle(April 21, 1918 – October 12, 1999) was an American artist and arts patron, founder of theCraft and Folk Art MuseuminLos Angeles.[1]
Edith Robinson Wyle | |
---|---|
Born | Edith Robinson 1918 San Francisco, California |
Died | October 1999 |
Known for | Co-founder of the Craft and Folk Art Museum |
Spouse | Frank S. Wyle |
Relatives | Sonia Romero(granddaughter), Noah Wyle(grandson) |
Early life and education
editEdith Robinson was born in San Francisco in 1918, the daughter of Rose and Louis Robinson.[1]Her grandparents were Jewish emigrants from Eastern Europe. Her parents were professional musicians, but her father also trained as a dentist.[1]Edith moved to Los Angeles with her parents when she was six years old. As a girl she studied art, music, and dance. She earned a degree in English at theUniversity of California Los Angeles(UCLA), and worked as a secretary before she married.
As a young wife and mother in the 1940s, Edith Wyle returned to painting, and studied with the painter and sculptorRico Lebrun,who encouraged her particular interest in folk arts. Through adulthood she continued to take classes in various media, including weaving and pottery.[2]
Career
editIn 1965, Edith Wyle opened The Egg and the Eye, a commercial gallery and café onWilshire Boulevard,across from theLa Brea Tar Pitsand theLos Angeles County Museum of Art(LACMA).[3][4]Describing the gallery's founding, she told theLos Angeles Times:
- "I'd always had this wild notion of wanting to walk through a tapestry gallery and eat a good lunch. And I could cook only omelettes. Presto... The Egg and the Eye. I think it is the best thing that could happen to a woman whose kids are grown."[5]
In 1973, the gallery and cafe became the Craft and Folk Art Museum (and the café took on the name of the gallery, The Egg and The Eye). Wyle was program director of the museum until 1984 when she retired, taking the title of Founder/Director Emeritus and going on the Board.[6]Wyle refused to allow a merger with LACMA in 1997 and, always struggling financially, the museum closed for 14 months. She lived to see the museum reopened under the auspices of the Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department.[7]
In connection with her museum work, Edith Wyle conceived of the Festival of Masks in 1976, a multicultural parade and arts celebration.[8]Wyle also worked on arts events during the1984 Summer Olympics,and served on the board atCalifornia Institute of the Arts(CalArts).[9]She was the author of several exhibition catalogs.[10]
Personal life
editEdith Robinson marriedFrank S. Wylein 1942. They had three children together: Nancy Wyle Romero (mother of artistSonia Romero), Stephen Wyle (father of actorNoah Wyle),[2]and Diana Munk.
Death and legacy
editEdith Wyle died from cancer in October 1999, age 81.[1]
The Edith R. Wyle Research Library of the Craft and Folk Art Museum, now housed at LACMA, was named in her honor in 1995.[11][12]
References
edit- ^abcdSuzanne Muchnic, "Edith R. Wyle, Founder of Craft and Folk Art Museum, Dies,"Los Angeles Times(October 13, 1999).
- ^abSharon K. Emanuelli, "Oral History Interview with Edith Wyle, 1993, March 9-September 7,"Archives of American Art, Women in the Arts in Southern California Oral History Project.
- ^"The Egg and the Eye Poster"(1965), USC Digital Library, retrieved March 2014
- ^"The Egg and the Eye,"Pacific Standard Time at the Getty Center,
- ^Bea Miller, "The Treasure Hunters: Home with the Frank Wyles,"Los Angeles Times(November 30, 1969): P84.
- ^George M. Goodwin, "A New Jewish Elite: Curators, Directors, and Benefactors of American Art Museums,"Modern Judaism18(2)(May 1998): 141.
- ^Deborah Lyttle Ash, "Craft and Folk Art Museum," in Gerald C. Wertkin,Encyclopedia of American Folk Art(Routledge 2013): p. 132.
- ^William S. Murphy, "Weekend Festival Offers Mass of Masks,"Los Angeles Times(October 25, 1986).
- ^Suzanne Muchnic, "Olympic Arts Festival I: Wide, Wide World of Masks: A Revelation,"Los Angeles Times(June 5, 1984): G2.
- ^Edith R. Wyle,California Women in Crafts(Craft and Folk Art Museum 1977).
- ^Edith R. Wyle Research Library of the Craft and Folk Art MuseumArchived2014-03-01 at theWayback Machine,retrieved 2 March 2014
- ^Joyce Lovelace, "A Treasury of Craft History in Los Angeles,"American Craft Council(March 20, 2012).