#art, Do You Know Suzy? Women Artists Series

(Suzy Frelinghuysen/The Berkshire Eagle)

I am almost positive that you do not know this artist. So I will tell you a bit about her, but I do encourage you to look further on, especially if you are interested in women artists and in abstract art. Suzy Frelinghuysen was an artist and an opera singer born in Newark, New Jersey (US) in 1911.

Suzy’s father was the president of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co. of New Jersey. Her grandfather, Frederick T. Frelinghuysen was Secretary of State under US President Chester A. Arthur), and her great-great-uncle, Theodore Frelinghuysen had been a senator from New Jersey.

Although Suzy studied voice, she always displayed an interest in painting. Her training in art was mainly through tutors in New Jersey and in her many and frequent trips to Europe. Then in 1935 she got married to North American artist, and advocate for American abstract art, George L.K. Morris. He was a great influence upon her career as an artist. Their home, and studios, in Lenox, Massachusetts has been converted into a museum.

Morris introduced her to the work of European artists like Picasso, Léger, Braque, and Juan Gris. This led her to the search which yielded work that leaned towards an abstract Cubist manner. She joined the American Abstract Artists (AAA/1937). Then in 1938 Suzy became the first woman to have a painting placed in the permanent collection of A.E. Gallatin’s Museum of Living Art. She also took part at the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles, in Paris, and exhibited also in Rome and Amsterdam. And in 1943, her artwork was included in Peggy Guggenheim’s show Exhibition by 31 Women at the Art of This Century gallery in New York.

From 1947 to 1950 Suzy sang at the New York City Opera and the New Orleans Opera. Bronchitis made her stop and in 1951 she returned to being a full-time painter.

Frelinghuysen died of a stroke at the age of 76 in Massachusetts. Her paintings hang at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Carnegie Art Institute, as well as in her home and studio museum in Lenox, Massachusetts.

(«Untitled»/Sotheby’s)
(The Magazine Antiques)
(Carnegie Museum of Art)

CHEERS

8 Comentarios

  1. Avatar de vermavkv vermavkv dice:

    Nice information

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    1. Thank you so much Sir. How is your day?

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  2. I never heard of her as either a singer or a painter. Thanks for sharing!

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    1. There are many good artists that should be known but somehow they are overlooked and at the same time the art world makes a big deal about some that are talent-less and rather mediocre. Thanks Dawn.

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  3. Avatar de janetsm janetsm dice:

    You were right, Francis. I had never heard of her. Thaks for widening my knowledge of the art world. You do that with every post!

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    1. It’s funny how the ones who «control» the art world and write art history pick and choose who to include and who to keep out. Well, I reckon that there are many of the good ones left out and many mediocre ones put in. Thank you so much Janet and all the best.

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      1. Avatar de janetsm janetsm dice:

        That’s so true. That’s why I appreciate the light you shine on such a variety of artists — especially the ones who have been overlooked by the powers that be. Keep up the excellent posts!

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      2. Thank you so much Janet!

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