Melinda Wortz, was an art historian, art critic, gallery director, and art collector based in Southern California.
Background
Melinda Jane Farris was born in 1940, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Her father was a professor of surgery at the University of Michigan. The Farris family moved to Southern California in 1948, when Doctor Farris joined the faculty at the University of Southern California.
Education
She attended Ethel Walker School in Connecticut, majored in art history as an undergraduate at Stanford University and at Radcliffe College, and earned a masters degree in art history from the University of California at Los Angeles, before pursuing doctoral work at the Graduate Theological Union at Berkeley. Her Doctor of Philosophy in Theology and the Arts was granted in 1990, for her dissertation titled "Radical Emptiness: The Spiritual Experience in Contemporary Artist".
Career
Doctor Wortz was a professor at University of California Irvine, chair of the art department and director of the UCI Fine Arts Gallery. She was particularly involved in collecting and presenting works from the Light and Space movement, which emerged in Los Angeles in the 1970s. The many published works by Melinda Wortz include Ludwig Wedl 1974 (Cirrus Editions 1975).
The Soft Screw (Gemini GEL 1976, with Claes Oldenburg).
Los Angeles Abstract Painting (University of New Mexico Press 1979). Diversity and Presence: Women Faculty Artists of the University of California (University of California Irvine 1987).
David Ireland: A Decade Undocumented 1978-1988 (Sesnon Gallery 1988, with Karen Tsujimoto). California Sculpture Show (Fisher Gallery 1989, with January Buttenfield).
Ansel Adams: Fiat Lux (University of California 1990).
And Variations III: Emerging Artists in Southern California (Fellows of Contemporary Art 2000). Melinda Wortz"s papers are in the Archives of American Artist A gallery at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego is named in her memory.