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Frick Madison: The temporary new home of The Frick Collection
Webinar Series
Recovering Women's Legacies: Artists, Dealers, Collectors, and Patrons

Recovering Women's Legacies: Artists, Dealers, Collectors, and Patrons

Wednesdays, June 2, 9, 16, 23, and 30
12:00 to 1:00 p.m. EDT
Live through Zoom

This June, the Center for the History of Collecting and The Wildenstein Plattner Institute are hosting a Wednesday lunchtime series spotlighting archival resources on important women who shaped visual culture in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Register for just one session or attend them all!

EVENT DETAILS

Schedule of Sessions

Part One: Archives Revealed
Wednesday, June 2, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Complicated Legacies: A Look at Women Dealers and Collectors from the WPI Digital Archives
Sandrine Canac, Director of Digital Archival Projects, The Wildenstein Plattner Institute
Samantha Rowe, Digital Archivist and Research Associate, The Wildenstein Plattner Institute
Discovering Women Collectors, Dealers and Artists in The Frick Collection Archives
Sally Brazil, Associate Chief Librarian for Archives and Records Management, The Frick Collection

Part Two: Digital Research Methodologies
Wednesday, June 9, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Mme. X: Women Collectors in Provenance Research
Elizabeth Gorayeb, Executive Director, The Wildenstein Plattner Institute
Jennifer Gimblett, Senior Researcher and Project Manager, The Wildenstein Plattner Institute
Transforming Research Methodologies: A Digital Approach
Louisa Wood Ruby, Head of Research, Frick Art Reference Library
Samantha Deutch, Assistant Director of the Center for the History of Collecting, Frick Art Reference Library

Part Three: Florence Sloan and Nanette Bearden
Wednesday, June 16, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Personal Ambitions and Communal Uplift: The Collector Florence Sloan through her Archive
Evie Terrono, Professor of Art History, Randolph-Macon College
Legacy Building: Finding the Archive of Nanette Bearden
Diedra Harris-Kelley, Co-Director of the Romare Bearden Foundation

Part Four: Catharine Lorillard Wolfe and A’Lelia Walker
Wednesday, June 23, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Catharine Lorillard Wolfe: Securing Her Legacy in the Cultural Landscape of the Gilded Age
Margaret R. Laster, Independent Scholar and Consultant, Center for the History of Collecting, Frick Art Reference Library
A’Lelia Walker’s Harlem Renaissance Salon
A'Lelia Bundles, Author, Board Member of the National Archives Foundation

Part Five: Panel Discussion
Wednesday, June 30, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Julie Des Jardins, Author of Women and the Historical Enterprise in America: Gender, Race and the Politics of Memory, 1880–1945, in conversation with Véronique Chagnon-Burke, Ph.D., Independent Scholar, founding member of the Women Art Dealers Digital Archive
   
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Image
Upper left—Photograph of A’Lelia Walker, Madam Walker Family Archives/A’Lelia Bundles. Upper right—Alexandre Cabanel (French, 1823–1889), Catharine Lorillard Wolfe (1828–1887), 1876, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (87.15.82), New York. Lower right—Nanette and Romare Bearden at Bearden’s opening at MoMA in 1971. Photograph by Sam Shaw, Romare Bearden Foundation Archives. Lower left—Florence Sloan’s wedding trousseau, Archives, Hermitage Museum & Gardens, Norfolk, VA