NEW YORK, NY.- Impressionist painter Mary Rogers Williams (1857-1907), renowned in her lifetime for exhibiting works from Paris to Indianapolis, left a legacy of portraits, landscapes and writings that ended up stored away in a Connecticut boathouse until 2012. Eve M. Kahn, the former Antiques columnist for The New York Times, has harvested Williamss rediscovered artworks and archive for a new biography, Forever Seeing New Beauties: The Forgotten Impressionist Mary Rogers Williams, 1857-1907 (Wesleyan University Press). In Kahns book tour, she will lecture October 6, 2 pm, at the
Portland Historical Society in Connecticut, and October 27 at 2 pm at the
Boston International Fine Art Show.
Mary Williams, a bakers daughter from Hartford, Connecticut, trained at the Art Students League and with artists including James McNeill Whistler. Starting in 1888, she ran Smith Colleges art department and, in every spare moment, traveled in Europe. While biking and hiking from the Arctic Circle to Naples, she sent home witty letters detailing spectacular passing landscapes, political scandals, religious processions, befuddled Americans abroad and art world rules that favored men.
Kahns book luminously reproduces Williamss under-appreciated paintings, with foresightedly proto-modernist wispy brushstrokes. Williams captured pensive gowned women, Norwegian slopes reflected in icy waters, saw-tooth rooflines on French chateaus, and incense hazes in Italian chapels. Kahn also offers a vivid portrayal of Williamss equally adventurous friends, who defied their era's expectations for women intellectuals.
Kahn explains, Ive never tired of telling people about Mary's accomplishments and feistiness and the flukes of fate that led me to her papers and paintings and to families of people who knew her.
Reviewers of the book have included Professor Katherine Manthorne of CUNY, who calls it a must-read. Amy Kurtz Lansing, curator at the Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, Connecticut, has described the book as at long last bringing this vivid woman the attention she deserves.
Kahns study is part of a wave of recent rediscoveries of late 19th and early 20th century women artists. Since Ive been on Marys trail, Kahn says, its been so rewarding to see her contemporaries like Ida OKeeffe, Agnes Pelton, Jane Peterson and Maud Knowlton get their due. Ive been called a resurrectionist, and I love being part of a growing circle taking on that title.