: Childs Gallery's current exhibition of paintings, watercolors,
drawings and prints by Anne Lyman Powers is filled with the
images of runners she has observed in the Boston Marathon.
The show will coincide with this year's 108th Boston Marathon on
April 19, and be on view through May 8. In addition, her love of
sports is shown in paintings and prints of the Boston Celtics,
oarsmen, canoe paddlers and whitewater rafters.
Powers was born and raised in Boston, and was educated at the
Winsor School and then received a degree in English at Vassar
College. While at Vassar, she studied sculpture and history of
art and also took a summer course in sculpture at Columbia
University. After World War II, she studied drawing, painting and
graphics at the Boston Museum School. During her last year (1948)
at the Boston Museum School, she was one of three students
selected to help instruct a painting class. In 1949, she was
given the opportunity to instruct at Wellesley College and
simultaneously taught privately.
Powers' work has been exhibited at the Boris Mirski Gallery,
Boston; The Main Street Gallery, Nantucket; The Galleries LTD,
Wellesley; J. Todd Galleries, Wellesley; and, The Downtown
Gallery, New York City. She has also exhibited at such museums,
among many others, as the Duxbury Art Complex and Museum; the
Huntsville Museum, Alabama; The Rose Museum, Brandeis University;
and the Museum of Modern Art, Boston, where she was Artist of the
Month in July of 1948. Her work is in corporate and private
collections throughout the United States.
This exhibition features Powers' interest in the athlete - from
the professional, such as former Celtics players Larry Bird and
Dave Cowens, to the weekend sailor, jogger, marathon runner,
bicyclist and sculler. The marathon has been a pervasive subject
in Powers' works, possibly influenced by the annual passage of
the runners through Wellesley, just blocks away from the artist's
home. She has depicted runners in many different mediums from
etching and lithography to watercolor.
For information 617-266-1108, or view the exhibition at .