$800,000 in grants awarded to six NYC and Vermont institutions in honor of Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn
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$800,000 in grants awarded to six NYC and Vermont institutions in honor of Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn
Emily Mason in her Vermont studio Photo by Joshua Farr.



NEW YORK, NY.- The Wolf Kahn Foundation, jointly with the Emily Mason | Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation (the distinct organization devoted to the legacy of Emily and her mother), announced $800,000 in grants to six art institutions in New York City and Vermont.

Following the $8.1M single-seller Christie’s sale of works from the couple’s art collection in May 2021, the gift round marks the first joint philanthropic initiative of the two sister Foundations and pays homage to Emily Mason and Wolf Kahn’s personal experiences and collective passions across five intersecting themes: New York City; access to arts education; Vermont; gardens and the natural world; and printmaking.

NEW YORK CITY

In 1940, the 12-year-old Holocaust refugee Wolf Kahn arrived in New York after having escaped Nazi Germany in August 1939 via Kindertransport to Britain. Wolf’s first foster family in England – the patriarch of whom was a constitutional law professor at Cambridge – had rejected and traumatized him for “not fitting the mold of what a refugee should be;” Wolf was well-educated and spoke perfect English, his father having been a prominent orchestra conductor (who lost his job the day Hitler took power).

At the time of Wolf’s arrival to America, Emily was an 8-year-old who had spent her childhood on Horatio Street in the West Village, sitting at her artist mother’s feet at Eighth Street Club gatherings (with Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, Helen Frankenthaler, Mark Rothko, and others) while her father worked as a sea captain. Emily’s family was particularly close with Sally and Milton Avery, as well as Willem and Elaine de Kooning; the latter would later babysit for Emily, sipping cocktails and smoking cigarettes over board games with “the girls.”

Emily’s mother, Alice Trumbull Mason, had founded the American Abstract Artists Group with Josef Albers in 1936 and was a leading, avant-garde force among the “boys club” of Abstraction in the 1930s-1960s New York art world. Alice picketed MoMA in 1940; regularly corresponded with Gertrude Stein and Piet Mondrian; and trained under Arshile Gorky—this is the culture Emily grew up surrounded by. Said Ad Reinhardt in the early-1960s: “Were it not for Alice Trumbull Mason, we [the Abstract painters] would not be here, nor in such force.”

From 1946, still a decade away from meeting Emily and simply through an organic passion for creating artwork, Wolf independently became immersed in the New York art scene as a pupil under Stuart Davis then as Hans Hofmann’s studio assistant. At last, in April of 1956, Emily and Wolf met at a Friday night meeting at the Eighth Street Club, each unknowingly on the cusp of breakthrough in their art practices. Emily spent the summer with Wolf in Provincetown (where Wolf was studying under Hofmann), then Wolf followed Emily to Italy that fall (she had received a Fulbright to study in Venice). They married in March of 1957 and moved into Wolf’s studio at 813 Broadway in Greenwich Village.

Later in life, having both been active participants in the cultural moment that saw New York achieve international prominence as a hub of artistic innovation, Emily and Wolf were prolific supporters of the city’s younger generations of creators.

ACCESS TO ARTS EDUCATION

Both Wolf and Emily had notable formal educations for their time, with Emily receiving a BFA from Cooper Union in 1955 (rare for a woman) and Wolf kicking off his art career in 1946, via the G.I. Bill and following a stint in the U.S. Navy, as a pupil under Stuart Davis then Hans Hoffman. Even after having established a strong foundational network to achieve success as an artist (including being curated into a group show by Clement Greenberg in 1947), education was most important; Wolf took advantage of the remainder of his G.I. Bill benefits and went off to earn a bachelor’s degree from the University of Chicago (fulfilling all credits in a single year) before coming back to New York to launch his art career in earnest.

For Emily in particular, rivaling her drive in the studio was her nurturing instinct to teach. From 1979 until just before her death, Mason taught art at Hunter College. A lengthy list of contemporary artists credit Mason’s mentorship as a guiding force of their career development. Said one former student of hers, Nari Ward (who is a board member of the Emily Mason | Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation): “Meeting her at that moment in my life changed everything … Her method of teaching was radically informed by empathy, and this humanistic approach undoubtedly fueled her remarkable vision. … For her, being an artist was about limitless options, and she understood that it meant sometimes breaking the rules.” Over the course of his lifetime, Wolf held various teaching roles as well, including but not limited to U.C. Berkeley (1960) and Cooper Union (1961 – 1977). Wolf and Emily were lifelong learners, steadfastly pursuing knowledge almost as fast as they could espouse it to others by way of their teaching.

VERMONT

Since 1968, Wolf and Emily were deeply connected to Vermont by way of their beloved farm in Brattleboro. They ritualistically spent summers there as a key part of their art practices; while they first and foremost were “New York artists,” Vermont was where they found respite and were most productive, surrounded by nature.

The Vermont landscape is pervasive in Wolf’s oeuvre and the basis for some of his most vibrant compositions; “Wolf Kahn is to Southern Vermont what Georgia O’Keeffe is to the New Mexico high desert and Claude Monet is to the French countryside,” remarked Danny Lichtenfeld, the director of the region’s largest art institution, Brattleboro Museum & Art Center (one of the 2022 grant recipients). While the finished result of Emily’s work was more greatly informed by New York City and the aura of her Chelsea studio, her fundamental creative process (and approach to color) were undeniably affected by the time she annually spent in the wooded surroundings of her Vermont studio.

The couple had a deep mutual respect with the local community and indelibly touched thousands through their regional philanthropy, like once saving a crucially serving primary school from eviction by quietly providing essential funds. IMAGE: Emily Mason in her Brattleboro studio in 2018. Photo by Joshua Farr.

GARDENS AND THE NATURAL WORLD

In their Vermont home, second only to their poetry collection (Emily Dickinson in particular), Emily and Wolf had bookshelves of meticulously sorted literature on botany and other specific aspects of the natural world. Two shelves on “mushrooms” alone. This reverence had a pervasive presence in both of their art-making practices and lives, with expansive gardens and greenhouses in New York and Vermont alike. They were unorthodox green thumbs, throwing in something exotic or cultivating a wild plant into a feature – not unlike how they each delighted in defying formal tenets of art-making (through application methods, chemical paint dilution, etcetera). Their philosophy to creating the gardens they took pleasure in surrounding themselves in (and constantly nourishing and expanding) very much mirrored their art practices.

PRINTMAKING

While Emily and Wolf were painters first and foremost, their advocacy of the print medium and willingness to push the form as accomplished printmakers in their own practices was evident throughout their lives. They particularly believed in the collaborative model of working with master printers around the country, as well as the multitude of notions of “access” – from art collecting to the creation process itself – that printmaking afforded.

An overview of grant recipients is below

• Brattleboro Museum & Art Center
• The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts (Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop)
• International Print Center New York
• The New York Botanical Garden
• Hunter College (Advanced Curatorial Certificate Program)
• Vermont Studio Center










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