Fanchon Fröhlich
   HOME





Fanchon Fröhlich
Fanchon Fröhlich (née Angst; 1927 – 2016) was an American artist. Life Born Fanchon Angst in Waterloo, Iowa as the only child of Joseph Aungst and his wife, Helen, Fröhlich won several scholarships and studied at the University of Chicago under Rudolf Carnap and continued in 1949 at Somerville College, Oxford, studying post-Wittgenstein linguistic philosophy with P. F. Strawson, gaining a BLitt degree in 1953. She married physicist Herbert Fröhlich in 1950, whom she met on the boat from America to Liverpool. As a postgraduate student she began to study at the Liverpool College of Art. She worked with Peter Lanyon in St Ives, Cornwall, in Paris with László Szabó, with Stanley William Hayter in ''Atelier 17'' and with Goto-San in Kyoto, where she went in 1972. She was also a friend of Erwin Schrödinger. After her husband's death in 1991, she founded ''Collective Phenomena'', working together with abstract artists with music by Lawrence Ball. They exhibited in Paris ( ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  


picture info

Waterloo, Iowa
Waterloo is a city in and the county seat of Black Hawk County, Iowa, Black Hawk County, Iowa, United States. As of the 2020 United States census the population was 67,314, making it the List of cities in Iowa, eighth-most populous city in the state. Waterloo comprises a twin conurbation with neighbor municipality Cedar Falls, Iowa, Cedar Falls. Waterloo is part of the Waterloo – Cedar Falls metropolitan area, Waterloo-Cedar Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area, and is the more populous of the two cities. History Waterloo was originally known as Prairie Rapids Crossing. The town was established near two Meskwaki American tribal seasonal camps alongside the Cedar River (Iowa River), Cedar River. It was first settled in 1845 when George and Mary Melrose Hanna and their children arrived on the east bank of the Red Cedar River (now just called the Cedar River). They were followed by the Virden and Mullan families in 1846. Evidence of these earliest families can still be found in ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  



MORE