Artists’ Illustrated Love Letters from the Archives

Highlights from a fabulous collection of illustrated letters

Reading other people’s love letters might be an act of voyeurism. These are personal communications between two beating hearts. Should we look? Of course we should. The lives of others is always fascinating.

Pulled from the collections of the Archives of American Art, the handwritten illustrated letters feature the thoughts, pictures and doodles of American artists. Many of the letters were exhibited at the Smithsonian exhibition More than Words: Illustrated Letters from the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art. They also appear in the book With Love: Artists’ Letters and Illustrated Notes by Liza Kirwin and Joan Lord.

 

Rockwell Kent (June 21, 1882 – March 13, 1971) to his wife Frances Kent, 1929

1945 letter from George Grosz to Erich S. Herrmann

George Grosz to Erich S. Herrmann, 1945

The above letter was sent in 1945 letter from George Grosz to Erich S. Herrmann inviting his friend (and art dealer) to his birthday party at his home in Huntington, New York, promising not just one glass of booze (Hennessy), but six (and more).

“Listen: boy! You are cordially invited to attend the birthday party of ME.”

Grosz (July 26, 1893 – July 6, 1959) died in Berlin, the city of his birth, from the effects of falling down a flight of stairs after a night of drinking.

 

Alfred Joseph Frueh to Giuliette Fanciulli, 1913 Jan. 10. The letter opens up into a little gallery of pictures. It was meant to educate Ms. Fanciulli before visiting a gallery.

 

Alexander Calder, Roxbury, Connecticut letter to Ben Shahn, New York, New York, 1949 February 24

Alexander Calder, Roxbury, Connecticut letter to Ben Shahn, New York, New York, 1949 February 24

Sculptor Alexander Calder, who lives in Roxbury, Conn., writes to invite painter Ben Shahn from New York, N.Y. for a visit. The letter is illustrated with a map to Calder’s house.

 

This Man Ray letter to painter Julian E. Levi l

Man Ray letter to painter Julian E. Levi, 1929

Man Ray’s letter to the painter Julian E. Levi is one of many that begins “Dear Julian” on stationery from Le Select American Bar in Montparnasse, Paris. He observes: “I have seven tall blondes with 14 big tits and one with sapphire garters.” The erst is hard to read.

 

Warren Chappell to Isabel Bishop, 1982 Sept. 6

Warren Chappell writes: I’ve just thrown a couple of drawings away & I realize – there’s no friend like a trash basket. I share this awareness & a greeting.” He illustrates the letter with a watercolor sketch of himself hugging a trash can.

 

 Finally, we close out with a letter Frida Kahlo sent to her friend Emmy Lou Packard in 1940, where she thanked Packard for taking care of Diego during an illness. The letter gets sealed, Priscilla Frank notes at HuffPo, with three lipstick kisses — “one for Diego, one for Emmy Lou, and one for her son.”

 

Frida Kahlo wrote to Emmy Lou Packard in 1940, thanking Packard for taking care of her husband Diego during an illness. The kisses are “one for Diego, one for Emmy Lou, and one for her son.”

 

 

Joseph Lindon Smith is best remembered for having traveled to Egypt and illustrated the excavations at Giza and the Valley of the Kings. In 1894, he was living in Paris as a struggling artist. He tell his parents: “Behold your son painting under a shower of gold.”

 

Max Bohm to Emilie Bohm – 1889 March 3

Alfred Joseph Frueh to Giuliette Fanciulli, 1913 Apr. 13

Gio Ponti to Esther McCoy, 1978 January 25

Edith Schloss letter to Philip and Dorothy Pearlstein, 1981 March 25

Edith Schloss thanks the Pearlsteins and others for their support while she was in the U.S., and includes her flight information. The text is written in a spiral shape and illustrated with watercolors of an elephant, a lion and a palm tree.

 

Patti Warashina’s Valentine to Robert Sperry, 1996 Feb. 14

 

Moses Soyer (1899-1974) to his son David,  ca. 1940.

Howard Finster letter to Barbara Shissler Nosanow, 1981

A letter to Nosanow at the National Museum of American Art, discussing Howard Finster’s (December 2, 1916 – October 22, 2001) upcoming visit to Washington, D.C. The letter is illustrated in pencil with sketches of Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson and William Shakespeare.

Finster writes: “I am excited to be coming to Washington where these great men once had our future responsibility upon them I feel so unworthy to live in a world of luxery [sic] and these great men paved our way…”

 

Allen Tupper True letter to Jane True, 1927

A letter from Colorado painter Allen Tupper True, known for his depictions of Western and Native American themes, written to his daughter Jane, while on a trip to New York. “This a lot more what New York looks like. This is me.”

Via: The Smithsonian site and in Kirwin’s handsome book, featuring artists well known and obscure, but all who knew how to compose a good letter.

Would you like to support Flashbak?

Please consider making a donation to our site. We don't want to rely on ads to bring you the best of visual culture. You can also support us by signing up to our Mailing List. And you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. For great art and culture delivered to your door, visit our shop.