Education
Washington University in Saint Louis. Wellesley College.
Washington University in Saint Louis. Wellesley College.
Leila Daw received her Masters of Fine Arts from Washington University School of Fine Arts in Street Louis, Missouri and her Bachelor of Arts from Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. She was a professor of art from 1974 through 1976 at Tusculum College, Maryville College, and Forest Park Community College, from 1976 through 1990 at Southern Illinois University, and from 1990 to 2002 at the Massachusetts College of Artist In 2002 she retired from teaching to become a full-time artist.
Daw"s works include permanent installations at the Bradley International Airport and the New Haven Free Public Library.
She has also participated in group exhibits at the Contemporary Arts Center and the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Artist Her work Red River (1991) at Centenary College of Louisiana, a pattern of wildflowers in a public lawn, is imbued with symbolism of menstruation and menopause.
Art by Daw originally commissioned for the Massachusetts Turnpike – a set of steel park benches painted to look like oversized folded paper maps – is on exhibit at the DeCordova Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts. Other works of Daw have been more ephemeral: her Pre-Historic River Channel (1981), for instance, used skywriting to map the course of the Mississippi River at an earlier age when it bypassed the current location of Saint Louis.
Over the years, Daw has incorporated a great diversity of materials into her work.
As Joanna Frueh writes, "Since the early 1980s she has used acrylic, pencil, bronzing powders, metal leaf, Mylar, foil, and other mixed media on paper and canvas in order to create maps that replicate the terrain in regions where she has lived – Saint Louis and Boston – and traveled, by car, plane, and imagination, such as the American desert West."
Schwartz, Helen (September 1977), "Leila Daw, opening new layers of women in art", Curtain Call, the Magazine of Saint Louis Arts: 9. As cited by Heller & Heller (1995). Eckstrom, Kevin (March 8, 1989), "Daw"s Works Reflect Topography Of Life", Saint Louis Post-Dispatch.
Review of a show by Daw at the Atrium Gallery in Saint Louis.
Harris, Paul A. (May 10, 1991), "Daw"s Abstract "Maps" of Metaphors", Saint Louis Post-Dispatch
Review of a show by Daw at Boston Sculptors at Chapel Gallery in Boston. Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy (1995), North American women artists of the twentieth century: a biographical dictionary, Garland reference library of the humanities 1219, Garland, p.
148, .
Zimmer, William (June 29, 1997), "Making the Leap From Science To Art and Beyond", New York Times. Review of a group exhibit at the Mystic Art Association, featuring a four-part painting of natural disasters by Daw, Doesn"t Stand a Chance.
Burnham, John (January 27, 2009), "Artist in the Galapagos: After visiting the Galapagos, Leila Daw discusses her work and the influence of her trip to the islands", Cruising World.
Harmon, Katharine. Clemans, Gayle (2009), The Map as Art: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography, Princeton Architectural Press, pp. 176–177, .
Daw was one of a group of artists who took part in the design of the Saint Louis MetroLink light rail system, and she became a member of the MetroLink project management team