Portrait Of An Artist
 
Anita Neal in 1988
As written In the
 Huntington Beach News by:
Lenni Sanders, September of 1988
 
"I'm excited about life and
about the things to come."
The year was 1984 and Anita Neal was 55
 
years old, an age when most people
 
considered retiring from professional
 
life.  But Neal's life took an unusual
 
turn that year when she became an
 
overnight sensation in the art world.
  
Her work, which consisted of oil
 
paintings, nude sculptures, and mixed
 
media acrylics, was now being exhibited
 
in 60 galleries throughout the world.
Through determination and courage, she
 
had overcome economic struggle, near paralysis,
 
the loss of her first husband and the
 
tragic death of a very talented young son.
  
Her life can be seen in her art.
At age 59, Neal spoke excitedly about her
 
art studio which was under construction at
 
that time in Big Bear, she spoke about her
 
plans to exhibit every where, and about her
 
national and international acclaim.
With buoyant energy she had exclaimed,
 
"Isn't it wonderful?"
But Life for this Huntington Beach 
artist wasn't always wonderful!
However, the seeds for greatness and
 
outrageousness were planted in her
 
ancestry.  Neal is a direct descendent
 
of Juan Marquez, a 16th century
 
representative of the King of Spain,
 
who claimed the state of New Mexico
 
for his country and settled in that state.
  
Her other illustrious ancestors include:
  
General Custer; John Paul Jones; the 19th
 
century German Composer, Felix Mendelssohn;
 
and a great grandmother who traveled
 
from New Mexico to California in a
 
covered wagon.  This great grandmother
 
opened the first boarding house in
 
Glendale and served breakfast to Tom Mix.
Years Of Tradedy and Resilience
Ms. Neal was born in Glendale during
 
the depression.  In her childhood,
 
Neal's father traveled throughout the
 
states to find work in construction.
  
There were times when her parents were
 
forced to put young Anita in orphanages
 
or foster homes while they traveled.
  
Whenever her father obtained a position
 
paying more money, they were reunited.
  
In 1988, Ms. Neal spoke with pride of
 
her father's involement in building the
 
Hoover Dam.  For awhile, he even made
 
enough money for Anita to attend private
 
shcool.  However, she began to support
 
herself at the age of 16 by working in
 
the medical field.
Married in 1947 to her first husband,
 
Truman Dowdle, Ms. Neal had two children,
 
Doug and Wendy, and the family struggled
 
with poverty during the early years of
 
the marriage.
Ms. Neal's life has been a series of ups
 
and downs.  For after poverty, came riches
 
as the Dowdles got involved in real estate
 
and their economic situation improved.
  
But, once again, an obstacle appeared.
This time Anita Dowdle was hit by a
 
drunk driver and lost all mobility below
 
her chest.  She spent much of 1965 and
 
1966 regaining the ablitlity to feel and
 
walk again.  Gradually, she learned to
 
walk and the family began to acquire money
 
through innovative marketing concepts in
 
several different business areas.  They
 
were beginning to do well again.
But tragedy surfaced once more in 1969
 
when Truman Dowdle was killed while
 
piloting a private plane.  The plane
 
was caught in turbulence.  The only
 
reason Anita didn't fly with him on
 
that day was because she was home
 
recovering from a minor illness.
Left with two teenage children to raise,
 
Anita began, once again, rebuilding her
 
life.  During this time, she began to
 
dabble in oils and started painting
 
landscapes.  She also began taking classes
 
in design and color but more as just a
 
hobby than anything else.
"I never had an inkling of any talent,
 
"Ms. Neal had no sense of the great
 
artistic talent within her that had
 
yet to emerge.
The Artist Emerges
In 1971, Anita Dowdle became Anita Neal
 
with marriage to Dale Neal, an insurance
 
executive.  Her interest in art began to
 
escalate as she earned an Associate in
 
Arts degree from Golden West College in
 
Fine Arts.  In 1981, she began taking
 
private art classes.
The artist now recognized as Anita Neal
 
received her first commmisssion in 1983
 
and by 1984, had become sought after by
 
the public.  By joining local art groups,
 
Ms. Neal was able to acquire more visibility
 
and local artists and galleries began to
 
recongnize her emerging talent.
What is "Nealism" and how did this
 
"overnight sensation" become inspired?
  
Ms. Neal's inspirations had been her
 
own experiences and the awareness of
 
people around her.  She sees and feels,
 
and is dramatically able to convey those
 
feelings on canvas in extraordinary ways.
  
Ms. Neal modestly accepts her acclaim.
  
Her humility is evident as her love for
 
art and people is what seemed to excite
 
her most.
Largely representational, her well-known
 
"Big Mommas" series had been inspired by
 
what she called "the dignity of the
 
larger woman."  "The woman who poses for
 
this series didn't want to be acknowledged.
  
I acknowledge her in my art", Ms. Neal said.
The paintings in the series are humorous
 
yet beautiful depictions of earth mothers.
  
Her color abstracts are interpreted by
 
modern critics as somewhat similar to
 
Jackson Pollock in style.
The portrait called "The Family,"
 
emotionally shows Neal's late son,
 
Doug, his wife and child clad in white
 
with Doug turning toward the artist.
  
This was painted prior to her son's
 
untimely death in 1986.  After Doug's
 
death, Ms. Neal became less of a figure
 
artist and more of an abstract painter
 
with dark forboding colors appearing
 
in her work.  Her emotional healing was
 
still in place as she worked on a
 
piece ~ her own interpretation of a 
13th century religious work showing
 
Christ's immortality and his mothers's
 
mortality.  Perhaps the completion of
 
that piece helped her with to heal the
 
pain of her loss.
The Acclaimed Artist
Ms. Neal's art is exhibited throughout
 
the world.  Her mentor, Ray Friesz, a
 
disciple of Jackson Pollack, introduced
 
Ms. Neal to the Crosshatch group which
 
is comprised of many 20th century artists.
  
While her brush strokes in several
 
paintings have been compared to those
 
found in Pollack's work.  Ms. Neal's
 
style springs from her own soul and
 
imagination, and so her fame continued
 
to grow as "Nealism."
In addition to Ray, one person who had
 
inspired me was Tracy St. John, a world
 
famous photo-journalist who suggested I
 
combine abstract with the figurative.
  
I like the results," Ms. Neal says.
She was the only Californian at the time
 
selected to be in "New Art in New York,"
 
at the famed Parsons Institute of Design
 
in New York City, one of only 60 artists
 
selected from over 6,000 entries.
Her oils, nude sculptures and mixed media
 
acrylics has been internationally acclaimed.
  
She has been recognized as a major talent
 
by Lowery Sims, curator of 20th Century Art
 
at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art;
 
April Kingsley, the New York Art Critic;
 
Dr. Ann Ayres, associate curator of Newport
 
Harbor Museum; Dr. Bill Otten, former
 
director of Laguna Art Museum; and a number
 
of other institutional experts.  Ms Neal at
 
this time was also associated with;
 
the Smithsonian Institute Hirshorn Museum
 
Registry; the John F. Kennedy Performing
 
Arts Center, Washington D.C.;  Huntington
 
Beach Allied Arts Board;  Irvine Fine
 
Arts Center;  Bowers Museum and many
 
other institutes.

 
Local galleries which exhibited
 
Ms. Neal's work included: the Ellan
 
Gallery in Laguna Beach;  the Southern
 
California Contempary Art Gallery in
 
Los Angeles;  and Loyola Marymount
 
University.
In June of 1988, Chinese American artist
 
were invited to Ms. Neal's studio, then
 
housed on the Penthouse floor of the
 
Charter Center Building in Huntington Beach,
California.  Under the auspices of Friends
 
of the Artists for Cultural Exchange (F.A.C.E.),
 
many internationally acclaimed artists
 
shared their ideas in an evening devoted
 
toward promoting true international peace
 
and understanding among the artists
 
of the world.
The Future
Ms. Neal, a true humanitarian, had been
 
inspired by her personal losses and by the
 
many people around her.  Her art is
 
inspirational to all who view it.
  
She is constantly looking to the future.
At the time of this interview Ms. Neal
 
said, "I am now excitedly working on
 
a multi-colored abstact which is
 
entitled the "Conspiere" series."
As Ms. Neal pursued different media and
 
continued to grow as a woman and as a
 
human being, her art had also grown.
  
Her works have been in great demand
 
over the years.  Every piece she created
 
excited her.
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Copyright 2002 Anita Neal, All Rights Reserved.
All works shown on this site are property
 
of Anita Neal and/or their respective owners.
No rights or permissions are granted for
 
display of any variations of these images on
 
other web sites, in web chats, web auctions
 
or in any other forms or variations
without express permission from Anita Neal
 
and/or their respective owners.
  
Thank You.
  
                                              
You can learn even more about
 
this amazing woman Anita Neal by clicking
onto the links 
below.
              
                
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