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Words Cannot Express: Death in the Archives

Archives of American Art

Death.

It is perhaps the only certainty in life. For those experiencing the death of a friend, family member, loved one, or an admired figure, words are often inadequate to give voice to the intense emotions involved.

When an artist dies, his or her life’s work is complete, and the building of a legacy begins. The Archives of American Art is part of that legacy-building process, preserving the remnants of artists’ lives in letters, diaries, sketchbooks, scrapbooks, and other primary records. Among these documents are countless examples of people responding to death in the art world—from letters of condolence and drafts of eulogies, to firsthand accounts of artists’ funerals and expressions of personal loss. The death of an artist evokes powerful emotions in the living, even as it crystallizes the deceased’s contributions to the art world. This exhibition presents the power of people speaking from their hearts about American art and artists.


Solon H. Borglum's funeral

James McNeill Whistler note to unidentified recipient, Cambridge, England

Walter Pach diary

Memoir on the death of Rodin

Diary, Vol. I

Draft of condolence letter from Joseph Cornell to Teeny Duchamp

Charles Webster Hawthorne letter to Emma Beach Thayer

Henry James letter to Antonio de Navarro

Leonard Bocour letter to David Soyer

Charles Dana Gibson letter to John White Alexander

Lock of John Frederick Peto's hair and a laurel leaf

In Memoriam poem for John Peto

Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), New York, N.Y. memorandum to unidentified recipient

Death stays the hand of the sculptor: In memoriam, Solon Borglum

Resolutions of the School Art league and the Board of Education regarding the death of John White Alexander

Notecards for eulogy of Stuart Davis

Speech at Joseph Cornell memorial service

The Occident

Eulogy for Carl Holty

Jay Pollock letter to Lee Krasner

Mark Rothko letter to Lee Krasner

Elizabeth Wright Hubbard letter to Lee Krasner

Cosmic Ray: A correspondent's open letter to the founder of the New York Correspondence School

Backstroking into oblivion: The riddle of Ray Johnson's suicide

Death rattleart

A performance-art death

Ray Johnson mail art to Lucy R. Lippard

Red Grooms letter to Anne Poor

Tribute to Milton Avery

List of people to call after the death of Frederick Kiesler

Lloyd Goodrich letter to Mrs. Max Weber

List of responses to condolence letters

James McNeill Whistler letter to Herbert Charles Pollitt

James McNeill Whistler letter to Herbert Charles Pollitt

James McNeill Whistler letter to Herbert Charles Pollitt

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