Spring is one of the pioneers in wood sculpture
and installation art. Her scenes range from complex
room-size installations to the smaller, more compressed "vignettes".
She was born in England and attended the Central
School of Art in London and the Gravesend School
of Art in Kent before coming to the United States
as a war bride in 1946. In 1951, Spring and her
family moved to San Francisco where she found herself
in the center of an artistic, cultural and spiritual
revolution. She remembers going to the King Ubu
Gallery and to many of the performances there and
at the later Beat Galleries- some quite daring
for that time. She began showing her work in the
annual San Francisco Art Festivals, which were
attended by musicians and poets as well as artists,
as early as 1951. "The critics hated the festivals,
but these were explosive times and very exciting!".
Her sculpture “Crucifixion” was rejected
at the 1955 Arts Festival held at Fisherman's Wharf
because the Christ figure was naked, however her
art construction of a life-sized wooden door festooned
with the businessman's daily necessities won the
purchase prize award at the San Francisco Art Festival
in the Civic Center, eleven years later.
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