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send a note to Edna at Edna@hibelmuseum.org
Edna's
Biography
Introduction
This highly popular artist is loved as much for her warm, adoring demeanor as for her art. Like any exceptional artist, Edna has an emotional connection to her art. Her spirit is so filled with love, appreciation of beauty, the purity of life, and universal peace, it becomes as natural for these qualities to materialize in her paintings as it is to breathe. Edna Hibel didn’t grow up wanting to be an artist; she just was an artist. She started painting at an early age because it came naturally to her. Edna Hibel was born to paint … to create. Like a painting, Edna’s life is formed through the canvas of her heritage, with every episode becoming the brush strokes that shaped the unique work of art known
as Edna Hibel. The backdrop against
which this work of art is painted is an
ancestry of Jewish immigrants from
Lithuania
on her mother’s side and passions – painting and playing tennis. She connected with the love of her life and eventual husband, Tod Plotkin, the summer after they both graduated from high school in 1934, although they had lived in the same neighborhoods and attended the same schools since third grade. Her talent was recognized early when she was in grade school, leading her to spend five years studying at the Boston Museum
School of Fine Arts, from which she
earned the Sturtevant Traveling
Fellowship to study in the unrelenting support and encouragement of her mother. After her wedding, she assumed she would have to give up painting for marriage, but Tod made no such demands. Instead, Edna kept on painting even while bearing and raising three sons. In 1959, Edna’s father died. That same year, the family business, Plotkin Brothers’ clothing store, was forced to close when sales took a dramatic downturn and was unable to recover from the financial loss. To provide income for the family, Edna started teaching art classes.
Interest in her art grew during the next two years. Tod and Edna considered someday opening a gallery. Then in 1961 things took a turn for the better when they
were offered a building in was still mourning the loss of her husband, and Tod and Edna saw this as an opportunity to motivate her to move on by enlisting her help in running the new gallery.
This decision was a good move. With her
acute business acumen and boundless
energy the new gallery’s success. Within days of opening, Clayton and Ethelbelle Craig entered their lives when they walked into the gallery and fell in love with
both Edna’s art and friends and acquaintances about the new artist they had discovered. With this fortuitous and grand new exposure,
Edna’s art grew
more and more popular in the 1960s. of the decade. Eventually the
Craig relationship led to the
establishment of the Hibel Museum of Art
in as well as an art
gallery on Craig.s also introduced her to a number of celebrities, including actress Ginger Rogers, sparking a friendship that produced one of Edna’s largest and most popular paintings, a life-size portrait of the famous movie star. Edna began producing lithographs in the early 1970s when a gallery o owner
offered to
buy the entire edition if she would
produce one. She established a
longstanding relationship with a
lithographer in in her spending several
months each year in Hibel Society, providing most of the homespun stories of her adventures that have endeared her to thousands of fans over the years. Showered with hundreds of awards and honors, she received the prestigious Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts for 2001, only the second woman and the second American to receive the award. Treasured for her mother and child paintings, Edna Hibel is also revered for her nudes and incredible character studies But it’s the eyes of her subjects that captivate audiences the most. Edna has the rare ability to capture a spirit in her paintings that is reflected through the eyes of her images. They seem to transcend beyond the canvas. You see more than color, style, texture, and technique in a Hibel painting. You see heart and soul.Proceeds from the sale of this book go to help support the Hibel Museum of Art.
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The Hibel Museum of Art is a non profit 501 [c]3 corporation. It is a private museum and operates solely on donations and sales from the Hibel Museum of Art gift shop. With out donations from our generous supporters we can not keep our doors open. If you would like to make a tax-deductible donation to the Hibel Museum of Art please contact one of the museum staff members. We thank you for your continued support. For more information regarding upcoming events and exhibits please contact the museum Tuesday through Saturday 11am -4pm. Group Tours Available. |