SEND ALL THE BOOKS TO THE DUMP! Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 5, Number 16, April 14, 2002, Article 15

    SEND ALL THE BOOKS TO THE DUMP!

    Dick Johnson writes: "Gertrude Katherine Lathrop was the
    sculptor of the New Rochelle Commemorative Half Dollar
    (One Fatt Calfe, above). Her entry occupies 111 lines in my
    upcoming book on American Artists of Coins and Medals.
    She did 12 medals and two commemorative coins -- the
    1936 Albany Charter, Breen 7554, was the other coin.

    I remember her from my days at Medallic Art Company in
    New York City. She was a member of the sculptor peer
    group that judged sculptors' models for both the Society of
    Medalists and Hall of Fame medal series. These took place
    in the company's Oval Gallery about 20 feet from my office
    door. She was small and frail (I doubt if she weighed over
    80 to 90 pounds) but very strong on opinion, the mark of a
    good judge. She relished criticizing the work [of men] twice
    her weight and two heads taller than she was.

    She was unmarried and lived in Falls Village, New York,
    with her sister Dorothy, a book illustrator. Dorothy died in
    1980, Gertrude in March 1986. The executor of their estate
    ordered their house emptied. Paintings and sculpture
    disappeared.

    But a couple of cub reporters for a nearby newspaper had
    a call that a lot of books and sculpture stuff had ended up at
    the local dump! Armed with boots and pitchforks they
    moved the overburden until they found the remnants of the
    Lathrop possessions. In the words of one of the reporters,
    Brigitte Ruthman, they found "old books, letters, art material
    and stuffed animals." The stuffed animals had served as models
    for both sisters' art work.

    They took what they could. "We found enough books over
    two days to fill the back of my 1986 Sabaru Brat twice,"
    Ruthman wrote, "and pile upon fetid pile of letters,
    published works, photographs and personal papers
    documenting more than a century of family history."

    They published two articles at the time. Then received a call
    from the attorney for the executor. They wanted back all the
    stuff they had originally ordered dumped! If not they would
    sue. Their own paper's lawyers suggested they return the
    material, which they did. Portions of this later sold at a
    Maryland auction.

    How useful this material would have been to another writer
    a decade later. Anne F. Roberts of Albany is writing the
    history of the two Lathrop sisters."

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2002-04-14
Volumen
  • 5

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Autor NNP