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Creator: Sigmund Abeles (b.1934)
Extent:
Location: Annex and Pob and P
Most materials stored offsite; advance notification required.
Biographical Sketch
Member of National Academy of Design, Society of American Graphic Artists, and Pastel Society of America; husband of Gina Godwin (1959-1969), Carolyn May (1970-1974), and Anne Merck (1978-1998); father of David Paul Abeles (b. 1961), Shoshanna Lynn Abeles (b. 1965), and Maxwell Merck Abeles (b. 1983); in 2004, Abeles taught drawing at National Academy School of Fine Arts.
Chronology / Timeline
Scope and Content Notes
Abeles’ autobiographical sketch, “My Yes-Tiddies,” recounts stories from his boyhood in Myrtle Beach, S. C., including, “how farm families would come in and politely ask to feel Uncle Mose and Uncle Max’s craniums for the horns that Hebrews supposedly have according to their bibles. When they were disappointed did they then doubt their bibles, or the ‘racial’ purity of my uncles or rationalize that there had to be some NYC clinic that removed them before sending forth heathen Hebrews into their bible thumping midst.” Remembering his childhood home on US-17, Abeles wrote that from the stoop, he had “seen Churchill, FDR and Bernard Baruch together pass by in an open limo, as well as truck after truck loaded with Nazi prisoners of war from a POW camp in our town, at other times, massive bronze or stone sculptures in progress en route to Brookgreen Gardens . . . That spot was my living education taking the place of what the rural deep South lacked, museums of history, nature, art, life.”
Pursuing his art education at various schools – including the Art Students League, Pratt Institute, Skowhegan School, and the Brooklyn Museum School – Abeles holds a Bachelors degree in art from the University of South Carolina and a Master of Fine Arts degree from Columbia University. David Andrew’s essay, appearing in “Sigmund Abeles, A Retrospective” tells the story of how Abeles received his B. A. from the University of South Carolina: “At semester’s end, having done many political cartoons in the university newspaper and having participated in front-line activities of the young civil rights movement (the famous Supreme Court decision banning segregation in the schools had been handed down the previous year), he was summoned to the office of the president. Abeles was asked, ‘Boy, if you love them [a reference to the minorities of New York] so much, why don’t you go live with them? I don’t think we have anymore to teach you.’ When the young artist protested that he was there to get a degree, the president said, ‘We’ll send you one in June.’ As a result, Sigmund Abeles found himself the sudden possessor of an A. B. degree in fine arts, one that had been earned in the record time of two and a half years.”
The majority of the collection is comprised of letter files arranged alphabetically by surname with individual files for persons represented by more than five letters. Represented are family, friends, fellow artists, and former students. Correspondence from Abeles’ mother, Henrietta Abeles, documents the dramatic changes occurring in both Myrtle Beach and South Carolina as a whole in the 1960s. Her letters also routinely discuss the civil rights problems throughout the South and lament the narrow-minded political views of South Carolinians. Other letters from South Carolina are from friends Dr. Bob Ochs, professor emeritus of history at the University of South Carolina, David Van Hook, former administrator of the Columbia Museum of Art, and Abeles’ maternal and allied families, the Banners and Leders. Artists represented include South Carolinians Jesse Bardin, William Halsey, and Jasper Johns. Other artist correspondents of note are Harvey Breverman, Dominic Cretara, Martha Erlebacher, Gregory Gillespie, Philip Grausman, Bud Shackelford, Lorraine Shemesh, Sidney Simon, Vincent Smith, Frank Stack, Harry Sternberg, Bill Stewart, and Jerome Witkin.
Gallery files include correspondence and inventory lists. Among these are three files tracing Abeles’ association with the Mary Ryan Gallery in New York, especially his efforts to recoup major losses after a December 1983 destroyed the gallery. While the galleries represented are from across the nation, many are in the New England area. Also present are various exhibition notices and catalogues of Abeles’ works and the work of others. Other materials relating to Abeles’ artistic life – articles, memberships, and exhibitions – can be found among the Art files.
Later in life, Sigmund Abeles became interested in the history of his Eastern European Jewish ancestry. There are files containing photographs, vital records, and other information relating to both his maternal family, the Banners from Poland, and his paternal family, the Abeles’ from Hungary. An extensive series of genealogical interviews conducted by Sigmund Abeles with relative Vilmos Abeles is included. Abeles also kept scrapbooks detailing his own life and work. Included in the files from his scrapbooks are articles, awards, memberships, and gallery announcements.
Also included are papers relating to the National Academy of Design, 1982-2002. Abeles served as correspondence secretary of the organization from 1991 to 1998. There are files related to Abeles’ professional life, including student recommendations and papers pertaining to Abeles’ professorship at University of New Hampshire, which spanned seventeen years until he resigned in 1987 to work in the studio full-time.
Oversize items include an account book, 1988-1991, sketch pad from 1949, certificates, watercolor by Natalie Smith, posters for Abeles’ exhibitions, and drawings entered in the Boston Memorial Holocaust Competition.
Collection Inventory
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This page updated
20 Jan. 2006
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South Caroliniana Library |