Obituary
Artist, designer, and sailor, Winslow Anderson, 90,
died Monday, December 10, 2007 at his home. The son of
the late Paula and George Anderson, he was born May 17, 1917 in
Plymouth,
Mass. In
his youth he wanted to design swift boats, but instead he was recruited into
the New York State College of Ceramics at
Alfred
University, where, in
1947, he graduated magna cum laude with Departmental Honors in Industrial
ceramic Design. During WWII he served in the United
States Army in
Pawling,
NY as a topographical
draughtsman. While trained as a ceramist, upon
graduation Mr. Anderson was hired as the first full-time designer at Blenko
Glass,
Milton,
West Virginia.
During his six year tenure, 1947-1953, he was instrumental in
creating new, modern functional designs in vibrant colors, which greatly
enhanced Blenko’s reputation. He often told friends how
the glass itself was the best designer: he stated, “The
glass did things in the process of being made; it revealed new ideas to me.”
The
Museum of
Modern Art presented
Anderson with a “Good Design
Award” for his bent neck decanter, which acknowledged his elegant,
simplified designs in 1950. In 1953 he went to work for
the Lenox China and Crystal Company in
Trenton,
New Jersey as both designer and
the design director. He remained there until his
retirement in 1980, when he chose to move back to
West Virginia.
Upon retirement Winn sailed his boat, the Ti Fi, painted and traveled
the world. He will be remembered by his friends as a
witty storyteller, a collector with a most discerning eye and as a visionary
designer. Donations in his memory can be made to either
the Huntington Museum of Art or the Putnam County Animal Shelter.
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