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Anne Truitt
Anne Truitt (March 16, 1921 – December 23, 2004), born Anne Dean, was a major American artist of the mid-20th century. She married James Truitt in 1948 (they divorced in 1969), and she became a full-time artist in the 1950s. A protégée of art critic Clement Greenberg early in her career, she worked within an extremely limited set of variables throughout her five-decades as an artist.〔Ken Johnson (December 10, 2009), (Where Ancient and Future Intersect ) ''New York Times''.〕 She made what is considered her most important work in the early 1960s anticipating in many respects the work of minimalists like Donald Judd. She was unlike the minimalists in some significant ways.〔(Biographical Sketch by Walter Hopps ) retrieved February 10, 2010〕 ==Early life and education== Truitt grew up in Easton, on Maryland's Eastern Shore, and spent her teenage years in Asheville, North Carolina.〔(Anne Truitt: Perception and Reflection, October 8, 2009 - January 3, 2010 ) Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.〕 She graduated from Bryn Mawr College with a degree in psychology in 1943. She declined an offer to pursue a Ph.D. in Yale University’s psychology department and worked briefly as a nurse〔(Oral history interview with Anne Truitt, 2002 Apr.-Aug ) Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.〕 in a psychiatric ward at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.〔(Anne Truitt, 83; Sculptor Chronicled Life as Artist, Wife, Mother ) ''Los Angeles Times'', December 30, 2004.〕 She left the field of psychology in the mid-1940s, first writing fiction and then enrolling in courses offered by the Institute of Contemporary Art in Washington, D.C.〔
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