Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Anna Adams

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Author, poet, artist

Partner
  
Norman Adams

Role
  
Poet

Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Anna Adams

Education
  
Hornsey College of Art


Born
  
Anna Theresa Butt March 9, 1926 Richmond, Surrey, England, UK (
1926-03-09
)

Alma mater
  
Harrow School of Art, Hornsey College of Art

Died
  
October 2, 2011, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Books
  
Now She\'s Back, Temporary Father, Unexpected Babies, Maggie\'s Guardian, Green Resistance

Anna Adams - finding and holding on to your true identity


Anna Adams (9 March 1926 – 2 October 2011) was an English poet and artist.

Contents

Biography

Anna Adams wwwpoetrypfcoukimagesannaadamsphotojpg

Anna Adams was born Anna Theresa Butt on 9 March 1926, at Richmond, Surrey. When she was two years old, her family relocated to Northwood, a town fifteen miles northwest of London. She was the youngest of three children. Her father was a journalist. During the First World War he had been a conscientious objector.

At the age of thirteen, Anna won a scholarship to Harrow School of Art, where she obtained the National Diploma in Design (NDD) in painting in 1945. At Harrow she met her future husband, the painter Norman Adams. They married on January 18, 1947. She continued to use her maiden name for her art work. She then studied sculpture at Hornsey College of Art, exhibiting in the Young Contemporaries show in London. There she completed her second NDD. After college she took a job as a part-time teacher. She held a number of jobs related to her arts training. She was a designer at Chelsea Pottery (1953-1955), a part-time art teacher in Manchester (1966-1970), and an art teacher at Settle College secondary school (1971-1974).

She had always shown an interest in writing, and by 1961 Anna Adams had begun to write seriously in both prose and verse. Her first poem was printed in 1969. Peterloo Press published her first book, A Reply to Intercepted Mail, in 1979 as part of its Peterloo Poets series. She had already published several small pamphlets, or chapbooks, and she continued to produce various shorter publications throughout her career. In all, she published about twenty books and pamphlets. Many of her poems appeared in newspapers, magazines, and literary journals, including Poetry Review, PN Review, The Countryman, 10th Muse, Western Mail, Poetry Durham, Poetry Canada, Encounter, Orbis, The Spectator, The North, and Yorkshire Journal. Adams's honors included several first prizes in the Yorkshire Poets competition and the 1976 Arnold Vincent Bowen Prize.

Adams was poetry editor of The Green Book from 1989 to 1992. She was a member of the Poetry Society and the Piccadilly Poets Committee.

References

Anna Adams Wikipedia