Read The Art of Acquiring: A Portrait of Etta and Claribel Cone Online
Authors: Mary Gabriel
Tags: #Biography
2. “I told him not to have it. . .” Pollack, The Collectors, 62.
3. Their European itinerary was. . . Richardson, B., Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta, 82.
4. In 1903, Bernard Berenson. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 153-154.
5. What he found in Cezanne. . . ibid, 146.
6. There was nothing to even indicate. . . ibid, 154-155.
7. Vollard, said Leo, liked. . . ibid,. 194.
8. Leo stretched out. . . Saarinen, The Proud Possessors, 183.
9. During his frequent musings on. . . Mellow, Charmed Circle, 63.
10. Years later, Leo wrote, “What you don't know. . .” Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 100-101.
11. From 1905 to 1907, wrote Matisse. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 57.
12. To the public he sold art. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 80-81.
13. The ex-clowm, said Leo, “twinkled. . .” . . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 168-169.
14. When Picasso looked at a drawing. . . ibid, 170.
15. But he reserved that bit. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 22.
16. Picasso's mistress, Fernande Olivier, described. . . “There weren't many. . .” ibid, 30.
17. One ramshackle building. . . ibid, 26.
18. Opposite the building. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 3.
19. The Picasso gang would. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 36.
20. The Bateau Lavoir. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 15-17.
21. Shortly after purchasing. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 169.
22. Fernande Olivier wrote, “I remember how surprised. . .” Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 82.
23. Leo described Picasso. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 170.
24. On that first visit, the Steins purchased. . . Mellow, Charmed Circle, 99.
25. The sisters entered at. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 109.
26. The art critic Louis Vauxcelles. . . Flam, Matisse, A Retrospective, 47.
27. Claribel wrote: “The Walls were covered with. . .” Mellow, Charmed Circle, 79.
28. Leo found “La Femme. . .” Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 158.
29. In the Journel de Rouen. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 55.
30. But to Leo, it was “art with a capital A. . .” Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . . ., 159.
31. He told Matisse. . . Hobhouse, Everybody Who Was Anybody, 41.
32. The woman with whom. . . . Herrera, Matisse A Portrait, 19.
33. The child, however, could. . . ibid, 29.
34. By 1900, Matisse and Amelie had two. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 40.
35. Matisse took a job painting. . . ibid, 40-41.
36. In the spring of 1901. . . Herrera, Matisse A Portrait, 43-44.
37. They didn't follow through. . . ibid, 43-44.
38. In August 1904, Matisse wrote. . . “I think painting will. . .” ibid, 48.
39. Early in his struggles. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 159-160.
40. Leo found him intelligent. . . ibid, 158.
41. Sally considered herself an artist. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 58.
42. On November 2, 1905, Etta. . . Richardson, B., Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta, 90.
43. A smiling though harried concierge. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 12.
44. The doors were scarred. . . ibid, 5.
45. Cinder was piled beside. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 47.
46. The curtainless windows. . . ibid, 48.
47. In the winter, a bitter. . . Warnod, Washboat Days, 17.
48. Picasso painted standing up. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 53-54.
49. His palette was dirty. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 170.
50. At the time, Fernande said. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 21.
51. Later, Gertrude teased. . . Stein, Gertrude, The Autobiography. . ., 52.
52. The Michael Steins were known. . . Toklas, What is Remembered, 22.
53. “They all had a sense. . .” Saarinen, The Proud Possessors, 187.
54. “From 1905 to the beginning. . .” ibid, 197.
1. “What can be said about. . .” Flam, Matisse A Retrospective, 68-69.
2. To the artist who needed her. . . Rogers, Ladies Bountiful, 3.
3. He had even ordered his wife. . . “The dirtiness of some of. . .” BMA CCol, CC Notes on Nevinson.
4. Two weeks after she purchased. . . Richardson, B., Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta, 168.
5. Gertrude needed someone to. . . Sprigge, Gertrude Stein Her Life, 54.
6. She began writing under. . . ibid, 56-58.
7. Three Lives marked. . . Benstock, Women of the Left Bank, 166-167.
8. Leo would not say he liked. . . Sprigge, Gertrude Stein Her Life, 58.
9. Etta, she wrote, was. . . Stein, Gertrude, Autobiography. . ., 52-53.
10. He said it remained “unequivocal”. . . Sutherland, “Alice and Gertrude and Others,” 297.
11. Gertrude once wrote, “It is one of the peculiarities. . .” Stein, Gertrude, Q.E.D., 55.
12. There was Max Jacob. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 56; Warnod, Washboat Days, 99.
13. Picasso took the money. . . Olivier, Picasso and his friends, 118.
14. Even Signac, who had previously. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 81-82.
15. There is some question, too,. . . Richardson, B., Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta, 158.
16. It would have been a very expensive. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 82.
17. Etta left Paris reluctantly. . . Pollack, The Collectors, 79-80.
18. John Stuart Mill wrote, “All the moralities tell. . .” Vicinus, Suffer and Be Still, 161.
19. Ironically, Etta received a marriage proposal that winter. . . Mellow, Charmed Circle, 101.
20. Years later, she explained that. . . Edward T. Cone interview.
21. Nursing what she called her “bum gut”. . . Pollack, The Collectors, 85.
22. Etta said she would probably. . . “Goodness knows how long. . .” ibid, 86.
23. Etta responded: “Poor little Picasso!. . .” Yale, SteinCol., EC to GS, Oct. 6, 1906.
24. Sunday newspaper supplements at the. . . Banner, American Beauty, 238.
25. “It may seem very strange. . .” Sprigge, Gertrude Stein Her Life, 66.
26. Matisse, now 37, appeared. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 88.
27. . . . old man of art compared with Picasso. . . Saarinen, Proud Possessors, 186.
28. Fernande called Matisse. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 84-85.
29. The twenty-five-year-old Picasso,. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 170-172.
30. And when he didn't. . . Olivier, Picasso and his Friends, 151.
31. The younger artist. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 85.
32. Within a year of each other. . . ibid, 86.
33. For Picasso, it was his. . . ibid, 86; Wertenbaker, The World of Picasso, 53.
1. “Make up your mind to. . .” Eliot, Daniel Deronda, 107.
2. In December 1907, Etta and her. . . Pollack, The Collectors, 90.
3. Both were used to having their. . . ibid, 92.
4. In the years after Moses. . . EPFL, Cone, Bertha Lindau, notes.
5. And, fully in charge. . . Edward T. Cone interview, Nov. 21, 1992.
6. Solomon, four years younger than. . . MDHS, Cone, Sydney Jr., Cones of Bavaria, 127-128.
7. If Moses felt it necessary. . . Edward T. Cone interview, Nov. 21, 1992.
8. She utterly exasperated Moses. . . Pollack, The Collectors, 92.
9. During a journey down the Nile. . . ibid, 92.
10. Moses purchased stone Buddhas. . . ibid, 92-93.
11. On February 6, 1907, from Cairo, she wrote. . . “Every whit of my oriental. . .” ibid, 91.
12. When she did, she stepped. . . Sprigge, Gertrude Stein Her Life, 81.
13. From Cairo, she wrote Gertrude, “I am most jealous that. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Feb. 6, 1907.
14. In Darjeeling. . . “I am hating the idea. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, March 30, 1907.
15. In a Rosh Hashanah greeting. . . “Happy New Year to you. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Sept. 9, 1907.
16. From China, she wrote Gertrude. . . “Now do be amiable and send. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, May 11, 1907.
17. And though Etta. . . “I hate, I despise Baltimore. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Jan. 7, 1908.
18. Claribel did not invite Etta. . . Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Sept. 9, 1907.
19. Etta's Paris fever was heightened. . . Richardson, B., Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta, 168.
20. Etta commented: “I love Picasso and. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Feb. 24, 1908.
21. Shortly after, Etta wrote Gertrude, “I shall sail sure as fate on. . .” Pollack, The Collectors, 97.
22. Ida, a prominent woman,. . . Arthur J. Gutman interview.
23. Etta described her. . . Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Dec. 4, 1907.
24. Etta described her. . . “heart still beats hot. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Jan. 7, 1908.
25. “The poor thing,” she lamented, “is so walled. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, April 14, 1908.
26. Gertrude's new companion was. . . Mellow, Charmed Circle, 105.
27. “Gertrude took me in Florence. . .” Toklas, What Is Remembered, 48.
28. With his death in 1906. . . “the man of the moment.”. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 174.
29. But as early as 1907. . . Barr, Matisse His Art, 83.
30. Matisse called Picasso “unsympathetic as a man. . .” Toklas, What Is Remembered, 38-39.
31. The Parisian art world. . . “served to increase. . .” Barr, Matisse His Art, 94-95.
32. Just as Picasso and Matisse. . . Stein, Leo, Appreciation. . ., 174.
33. Now, a sufficient number of younger. . . Flam, Matisse A Retrospective, 103.
34. The prospering artist also. . . Herrera, Matisse A Portrait, 72.
35. “On the strength of these. . .” Barr, Matisse His Art, 113.
36. In June 1908. . . “Like nearly all the other. . .” ibid, 113-114.
37. James Gibbons Huneker. . . ibid, 114.
38. In August, they returned. . . Pollack, The Collectors, 99.
39. In June, Etta wrote. . . “It is the dream of my life. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to MS, June 15, 1908.
40. In April, Etta wrote. . . “I have meant to write. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, April 11, 1909.
41. July 25: “My silence only means that. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, July 25, 1909.
42. August 22: “. . . honestly Gertrude, you cannot. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Aug. 22, 1909.
43. September 26: “There is no need to deny. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Sept. 26, 1909.
44. And finally, in December she wrote. . . “My brother's death almost. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Dec. 12, 1909.
45. And, “I wish, oh I do wish. . .” Yale SteinCol, EC to GS, Jan. 10, 1910.
1. “You want to see life—. . . .” James, The Portrait of a Lady, 203.
2. She wrote Etta that. . . “most terribly flattered. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, Dec. 2, 1906.
3. And, in another letter, she confided. . . “I cannot hear from too. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, July 7, 1910.
4. Albrecht no doubt. . . BMA CCol, CC to EC, May 30, 1904.
5. Even at the height. . . “usually too late to. . .” “Eccentric Esthetes,” 95-96.
6. She told an interviewer. . . “I never get my work. . .” The Evening Sun, April 8, 1911, 4.
7. To describe the last group. . . “Idleness has as a good. . .” Pollack, The Collectors, 88.
8. Claribel, the woman with. . . “credit to both their. . .” Abrahams, Extinct Medical Schools, 72.
9. “There is a sort of intolerable. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, June 22, 1910.
10. “Do you know as to. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, June 30, 1910.
11. “You do not know what. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, Sept. 2, 1910.
12. As the middle Cone sister. . . “Dr. Cone has often been. . .” The Evening Sun, April 8, 1911, 4.
13. She was described by. . . “the only lady who combines. . .” BMA CCol, MS to CC, Dec. 26, 1910.
14. And, in fact, at some point. . . Cone, Claribel, Aunt Etta, 2.
15. “Do you know every now. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, Aug. 7, 1910.
16. From FRankfurt, Claribel traveled. . . “music-music-music. . .” BMA CCol, CC to EC, July 8, 1910.
17. “Oh how I love this. . .” BMA CCol, Aug. 25, 1910.
18. “How awesome it was. . .” BMA CCol, Aug. 25, 1910.
19. Drastic changes had come. . . “salon des refuses”. . . Toklas, What is Remembered, 62.
20. Leo and Gertrude quarreled. . . Saarinen, The Proud Possessors, 192-193.