Background
Her appreciation of indigenous art began in the same period, as her father was an avid collector of aboriginal art and artifacts. Like her father, Andersen chose medicine as her profession, graduating as a Registered Nurse in 1940 from the Regina General Hospital School of Nursing.
Career
Her subjects were often women, themes expressing her convictions about social justice and strong anti-war sentiments. They explore design and colour, often playfully, for their own sake. When the Ross marriage ended in divorce in the 1950s, she remarried to Fritz Raabye Andersen.
Andersen"s career as a painter began in the late 1950s when she enrolled in art classes in Vancouver, her home for many years.
Gordon "Kit" Thorne, a local artist many years her senior was an early mentor. In the 1950s and 60s, women artists in Vancouver had particular difficulty gaining recognition.
Most artists, female or male, supported themselves with income from other jobs. Andersen worked as a nurse and as a salesperson for educational courses, painting and studying as time permitted.
Nevertheless, she continued to paint and study under such notables as John Koerner, Joe Plaskett.
Bill Porteous and Jacques de Tonnacour. She counted Bill Reid and Jack Shadbolt and Max Maynard among her artist friends, admiring their work but not studying under them. During the 1970s and 80s, Andersen"s style evolved, influenced by an eclectic appreciation of styles ranging from expressionism to hard edge abstraction.
She arrived at a unique style of her own.
Direct, brightly coloured and emotionally expressive. Andersen was a peace activist from the 1960s until her death, attending many Ban The Bomb marches and peace rallies in the 1960s when she lived in Vancouver, British Columbia.
She continued her involvement when she moved to Saanichton on Vancouver Island, on into the 1990s. Her large painting Nuclear Mother recorded her horror of nuclear weapons.
In an art brut style, it depicts a grieving mother holding her slain infant.
Politics
About half of Andersen"s works are independent of her political views.