Nina de Creeft Ward
Nina de Creeft Ward is an American artist who works with bronze, soft sculptures, etchings, woodcuts, and monoprints. She had multiple art exhibitions in the Philippines and the United States. Ward was the co-winner of the Individual Artists Award for Works in Clay in 2006 from the Santa Barbara Arts Fund. Most of Ward's work has to do with animals, including a 1998 exhibition of art that resembled endangered and extinct species. She has taught students such as at the University of Northern Iowa. Her clay animal models are made with raku ware.
Personal life
Nina de Creeft Ward was born in 1933 in New York City to Jose de Creeft and Alice Robertson Carr de Creeft, who were both sculptors. Ward's mother cared for animals, leading to Ward having a fondness for them. Ward, her mother, and her brother moved to Santa Barbara, California, after her parents had a divorce. She spent her childhood in Santa Barbara and Ojai, California. Ward attended Happy Valley School, which is now known as Besant Hill School.Ward began to sketch draft horses for the Los Angeles County Fair during her time at Scripps College. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1956 from Scripps College, a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1964 from the Claremont Graduate School, and further studied at the Massachusetts College of Art. Ward was taught by Albert Stewart, Betty Davenport Ford, and Paul Soldner, with the last teaching her how to create raku ware. She later moved back to Santa Barbara in 2001 after living in Iowa for 26 years with her husband. They had five children.
Career
Ward moved to Cedar Falls, Iowa, in 1975 and she taught art at the University of Northern Iowa for nine years. She was an art teacher for all ages from children to adults. She taught in Claremont at Girls Collegiate School for two to three years. Ward's work consists of bronze, soft sculptures, etchings, woodcuts, and monoprints. She made animals out of clay, and they are sold in the United States. Ward said that she works "almost exclusively with animal themes" with a "fairly sandy raku clay recipe" that she mixed herself.Ward built a sculpture of two draft horses titled Shoulders of Giants in 1998 for the University of Northern Iowa's library and museum. She created a bronze sculpture of a farm dog in 1999 named Shep at the Patty Jischke Children's Garden in Reiman Gardens. She first drew several pictures of her dog to create Shep, followed by small clay models. Once Ward finished the small models, she made a full-size clay model that was then made into a bronze cast in Kalona, Iowa. In 2016, Ward was the juror at the 2016 Tri-Cities Online Ceramics Show which was hosted by the Student Art Fund of the Santa Barbara Art Association. The Frick Collection's Archives Directory for the History of Collecting has "Esther Bear Gallery records, 1954-1977" that includes information about Ward.