Ute de Lange Nilsen

Ute de Lange Nilsen with her puppet Solungen ('child of the sun'). Photo taken in Arendal in connection with the 2013 suffrage festival and the exhibit With Art As a Voice (Med kunsten som stemme).

Ute de Lange Nilsen Scharf (born August 2, 1931) is a Czech-Norwegian jewelry artist and puppet maker living in Arendal.[1][2]

Ute de Lange Nilsen was born in Jablonec nad Nisou.[1] She studied in Germany from 1947 to 1950, where she obtained her journeyman certification as a goldsmith, and then at the College of Art and Crafts from 1948 to 1953.

She moved to Norway as a newly graduated goldsmith in 1953/54.[1] There she worked for one year at the Holthe jewelry factory in Arendal, and then moved back to Germany to obtain her master-tradesman's certificate in 1956. Later she returned to Arendal, where she still lives.[2] There she had her own goldsmith workshop and several retail locations in the town. She participated in several exhibits, including the traveling exhibit Norwegian Arts and Crafts from Agder (Norske kunsthåndverkere Agder) in 1982, at the Lyngdal Art Society (Lyngdal kunstforening) in 1982, and at the Hillestad Gallery in Tovdal in 1987. In addition to working with jewelry, she has created artworks in metal, stone, and enamel.[1] People, faces, masks, geology, plants, and animals are among her many interests and inspirations.[3]

She is also known for her puppet theater work, and she was active in Arendal's puppet theater and in the Arendal Drama Society (Arendal Dramatiske Selskab). She has held many courses in puppet making and arranged puppet theater classes for children. The performance Den magiske kosten (The Magic Broom) in February 2013 was her 19th and last performance since the theater was established in the late 1960s.[3]

Ute de Lange Nilsen is a member of the Norwegian Craftsmen's Association of South Norway (Norske kunsthåndverkere Sør-Norge) and the International Puppetry Association.

References

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.