 Linda 
                Robinson Sokolowski, having begun intense studio work at Rhode 
                Island School of Design, spent her senior year in Rome with the 
                school’s European Honors Program. Those eight months drawing 
                in the Roman Forum, Hadrian’s Villa and the hilltowns of 
                Tuscany initiated an independent vision of landscape sites that 
                are implied records of remarkable human endeavor. After having 
                received her BFA in painting from R.I.S.D. in 1965, she chose 
                the University of Iowa for graduate work in printmaking, after 
                having seen Mauricio Lasansky’s “Nazi Drawings” 
                at the Whitney. Determined to continue her study of intaglio (after 
                Michael Mazur’s “Closed Ward” influences at 
                R.I.S.D.), she chose Lasansky’s superb print workshop where 
                she completed her M.A. with her written thesis, The Original Prints 
                and Restrikes from the Plates of Kaethe Kollwitz.
Linda 
                Robinson Sokolowski, having begun intense studio work at Rhode 
                Island School of Design, spent her senior year in Rome with the 
                school’s European Honors Program. Those eight months drawing 
                in the Roman Forum, Hadrian’s Villa and the hilltowns of 
                Tuscany initiated an independent vision of landscape sites that 
                are implied records of remarkable human endeavor. After having 
                received her BFA in painting from R.I.S.D. in 1965, she chose 
                the University of Iowa for graduate work in printmaking, after 
                having seen Mauricio Lasansky’s “Nazi Drawings” 
                at the Whitney. Determined to continue her study of intaglio (after 
                Michael Mazur’s “Closed Ward” influences at 
                R.I.S.D.), she chose Lasansky’s superb print workshop where 
                she completed her M.A. with her written thesis, The Original Prints 
                and Restrikes from the Plates of Kaethe Kollwitz.
In 1971, after having been for several years the assistant in Drawing to the painter James Lechay and after having received her M.F.A. in printmaking, she was invited to become Instructor of Drawing at the University of Iowa during the summer months. That same year she accepted a full time Department of Art faculty position at Harpur College, SUNY Binghamton (Binghamton University), later becoming head of printmaking while continuing to be a primary influence in drawing for over three decades. She was known for her glue that connected monotype and intaglio printmaking respectively to painting and sculpture as she enthusiastically designed substantial problems for her students who thrived from those connections.
Sokolowski’s paintings and works on 
                paper have been shown primarily in New York City through Kraushaar 
                Galleries where she presented ten solo shows in the thirty-three 
                years she was represented by that gallery under Antoinette Kraushaar, 
                Carole Pesner and later Katherine Kaplan Degn. In 2007, her landscape 
                retrospective, entitled The Earth’s 
                Stage, was mounted at the Roberson Museum and Science Center 
                in Binghamton. Since that exhibition she has been involved with 
                six series of large monotypes and paintings: 
                 Cathedral 
                Facades; The Coasts of New Zealand; The Great Hypostyle Hall at 
                Karnak;
Cathedral 
                Facades; The Coasts of New Zealand; The Great Hypostyle Hall at 
                Karnak;
                 Volcanic Fields; The 
                Life of Death Valley, and The Mountains Surrounding Tucson.
Volcanic Fields; The 
                Life of Death Valley, and The Mountains Surrounding Tucson. 
              
Sokolowski received 
                the Childe Hassam Purchase Award from the American Academy of 
                Arts and Letters and several research grants from the State University 
                of New York. She has participated in group exhibitions at many 
                venues including Arkansas Art Center, the Butler Institute of 
                American Art, McNay Art Institute, Munson- Williams-Proctor Institute, 
                the National Academy of Design, Pratt, Rhode Island School of 
                Design and the National Museum of American Art of the Smithsonian 
                Institution. Her work can be found in the public collections of 
                the Library of Congress, PepsiCo, the Pushkin Museum, Moscow and 
                many universities. Sokolowski’s work has been reproduced 
                in the following publications:  
                 The 
                Artist and the American Landscape by 
                John Driscoll and Arnold Skolnick, published in 1998 in the USA 
                by First Glance Books
The 
                Artist and the American Landscape by 
                John Driscoll and Arnold Skolnick, published in 1998 in the USA 
                by First Glance Books
                 Contemporary 
                Women Artists by Wendy Beckett, published 
                by Phaidon Press Limited, 1988
Contemporary 
                Women Artists by Wendy Beckett, published 
                by Phaidon Press Limited, 1988
                 More 
                than Land or Sky: Art from Appalachia, published 
                by the Smithsonian Institution Press in 1981
More 
                than Land or Sky: Art from Appalachia, published 
                by the Smithsonian Institution Press in 1981
                 Linda 
                Sokolowski:The Earth's Stage (catalogue 
                for her landscape retrospective), copyright September 2007, Roberson 
                Museum and
Linda 
                Sokolowski:The Earth's Stage (catalogue 
                for her landscape retrospective), copyright September 2007, Roberson 
                Museum and  Science 
                Center ISBN 0-937318-34-5
Science 
                Center ISBN 0-937318-34-5
The artist actively maintains printmaking 
                and painting studios in Bethel, New York where she works and lives 
                with her husband Robert. They travel to sites that her work requires….the 
                Southwest’s canyons, Hawaii’s, Ecuador’s and 
                California’s volcanic craters, Italy’s ruins and structures 
                on water, Germany’s river towns and cathedrals, the temples 
                and pyramids of Guatemala, Mexico and Egypt, and Peru’s 
                Incan structures. Locally she is inspired by a landscape of abandoned 
                spaces, its pools, silos, bridges and its surrounding wetlands 
                and fields. In addition to interpreting the earth’s structures, 
                Sokolowski continues to work figuratively with inspiring models. 
                
              
