Sunday, December 10, 2017

Maria Sebregondi, Creator of the Moleskine notebooks (b.
Financial Times November 24-26 2017

"It is perhaps unsurprising that Maria Sebregondi, the woman who elevated the humble notebook to must-have status, would have sought the satisfaction of an at-home library. The Moleskine founder puts other home bibliophiles in the shade, having turned her entire Milan apartment into a high temple devoted to the written word."

Co-founder of the Moleskine Company, she conceived the notebook line in the 1990s. Director of Brand Equity and Communication until 2015, she was then a strategic advisor and Board Member of Moleskine. Currently she does not have any office in the Company and is completely dedicated to non-profit activities.Previously she worked independently as a consultant on strategic communications and product concept. Her professional experiences led to several teaching positions at various public and private universities.  Author of several socio-anthropological essays and articles on contemporary change, her writing works also extend to various other areas: creative writing, poetry, non-fiction and literary translation.   She was a co-founder of the non-profit foundation lettera27 and a member of OPLEPO, Opificio di Letteratura Potenziale (Workshop of Potential Literature).


Tamar Frankel, Law Professor and Godmother of the Fiduciary Rule (b. July 4, 1925)

Tamar Frankel has been a professor of law at Boston University School of Law since 1968. She is the author of The Ponzi Scheme Puzzle: A History and Analysis of Con Artists and Victims, Fiduciary Law, Trust and Honesty: America’s Business Culture at a Crossroad, Investment Management Regulation, Securitization, and The Regulation of Money Managers. Her areas of scholarship include financial system regulation, fiduciary law, corporate governance, the Internet, and Space Law. A native of Israel, she has taught at Oxford University, Tokyo University, and lectured in Geneva and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and has consulted with the People's Bank of China. She has been a Faculty Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, and was a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C.

In 1968 as she was still studying to complete her dissertation, Frankel joined Boston University.  The field was so male-dominated that;, when she arrived as the law schools' first female professor, BU relegated her office to the basement of the library.  She will quite teaching when she turns 93 next July, although she will continue to research and write.  What accounts for her longevity?  "Caring less and less about what other people think," she says, "and more and more about questions you don't have the answers to." 

Currently a law professor at Boston University, Frankel still commutes to work five days a week and teaches two courses.  Frankel has been advocating that brokers should put their clients first for more than 40 years.  The BU School of Law announced in November 2017 that Professor of Law and Michaels Faculty Research Scholar Tamar Frankel has been selected to receive the Ruth Bader Ginsberg Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Association of Law School’s (AALS) Section on Women in Legal Education.

Friday, November 24, 2017

Leonora Carrington, Artist (April 6, 1917-May 25, 2011)

Leonora Carrington OBE was an English-born Mexican artist, surrealist painter, and novelist. She lived most of her adult life in Mexico City, and was one of the last surviving participants in the Surrealist movement of the 1930s. Leonora Carrington was also a founding member of the Women’s Liberation Movement in Mexico during the 1970s.

Financial Times 2017:  Carrington is as famous for her life as for her art.  The story of the nicely born English girl, child of a wealthy industrialist, who fled her respectable roots to hang out in New York and Paris with Surrealist writers and artists (her relationship with the older Max Ernst began when she was just 20), has a lingering glamour.  After she settled in Mexico in 1941, her art flowered in a baffling number of directions: playwriting to sculpture, poetry to tapestry and set design-although her painting remains the best know.  Filled with the familiar dreamlike imagery of Surrealism's vocabulary, her work responded to the vibrancy and folklore of her adopted Mexico why retaining storybook delicacy. 


Germaine Krull, Photographer (Nov. 29, 1987-July 31, 1985)

Germaine Luise Krull was a photographer, political activist, and hotel owner. Her nationality has been categorized as German, French, and Dutch, but she spent years in Brazil, Republic of the Congo, Thailand, and India. Described as "an especially outspoken example" of a group of early 20th-century female photographers who "could lead lives free from convention", she is best known for photographically-illustrated books such as her 1928 portfolio Métal.

Violet Oakley, Artist and Muralist (June 10, 1874-Feb. 25, 1961)

Violet Oakley was an American artist and the first American woman to receive a public mural commission. During the first quarter of the twentieth century, she was renowned as a path-breaker in mural decoration, a field that had been exclusively practiced by men. Oakley excelled at murals and stained glass designs that addressed themes from history and literature in Renaissance-revival styles.
Oakley's student and life partner, Edith Emerson,  was instrumental in conserving one of her mural cycles now in the Woodmere Art Museum, Philadelphia.


Sunday, November 19, 2017

Cynthia Shoshana Ozick, American short story writer, novelist, and essayist (b. April 17, 1928_

Cynthia Ozick was born in New York City, the second of two children. She moved to the Bronx with her Russian-born parents, Celia and William Ozick, proprietors of the Park View Pharmacy in the Pelham Bay neighborhood. As a girl, Ozick helped to deliver prescriptions. Growing up in the Bronx, she remembers stones thrown at her and being called a Christ-killer as she ran past the two churches in her neighborhood. In school she was publicly shamed for refusing to sing Christmas carols. She attended Hunter College High School in Manhattan. She earned her B.A. from New York University and went on to study at Ohio State University, where she completed an M.A. in English literature, focusing on the novels of Henry James.

Giles Harvey in the NEw York Times Sunday magazine, states that "she has written some of the strangest, most intellectually daring and morally intelligent fiction of recent times, including The Shawl (1989) and The Puttermesser Papers (1997).  She has also written essay after essay on subjects ranging from the Book of Job and Gershom Scholem to Helen Keller and Susan Sontag.  Her newest book is Critics, Monsters, Fanatic's, and Other Literary Essays.

Harvey further states that "Certainly it Is impossible to understand Ozick's pessimism, and its reliance to our current moment, without appreciating the essential Jewishness of her critique.  To be a Jew, her work insists, is to recognize the tenuousness of cultural transmission.  All the World Wants the Jews Dead is the searing title of her 1974 essay, and the Jews . . . have not made it this far by taking continuity for granted.  The extraordinary dynamism of Ozick's thinking and writing derives from the conviction tat thinking and writing, the study of certain sacred texts, are not merely ends in themselves , but matters of survival."


Saturday, November 18, 2017

Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (1759-1797)
Mary Godwin Shelley (1797-1851)

This mother-daughter pair, who were together only 10 days after Mary Shelley's birth, were much alike.  Both overcame enormous pressure to live by their writings and to be the equal of men.  Charlotte Gordon, the author of Romantic Outlaws, a book about the pair, emphasizes the similarities between mother and daughter and the desire they shared "To be themselves.  The hurdles, the critics, the enemies, the insults, the ostracism, the betrayals, the neglect, even the heartbreaks - none of these had stopped them.  Nothing stopped them writing."  Before Gordon's book, the two had never been brought together in a dual biography.  "They have historically been taught as separate figures, but Mary Shelley was an expert on her mother.  She read every book her mother ever wrote countless times.  She was an expert on all things Wollstonecraft." 

Both were authors of world-changing books."  Wollstonecraft wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), and Godwin wrote Frankenstein (1818).  Godwin's novel is a case in point - when I first read it six decades ago, the author was her husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley.   Later, it was grudgingly acknowledged that she may have contributed; later still, when evidence showed that it might have been written by Godwin, the brilliance of the book was attributed to the guidance and editing of her husband.  But in fact, she wrote it.  Herself.  So the bias and evil done against her and her mother, and the millions of women like  them, still perpetuate after three centuries.
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin

I was unable to reproduce a picture of Mary Godwin Shelley.

Friday, November 17, 2017

Licia Albanese, Soprano (July 22, 1909 - Aug. 15, 2017)

Licia Albanese was an Italian-born American operatic soprano. Noted especially for her portrayals of the lyric heroines of Verdi and Puccini, Albanese was a leading artist with the Metropolitan Opera from 1940 to 1966. She also made many recordings and was chairwoman of The Licia Albanese-Puccini Foundation, which is dedicated to assisting young artists and singers.

In April, 1966, when the Metropolitan Opera moved from its storied old home in 39th Street and Broadway to it new one at Lincoln Center, Albanese sang Cio-Cio-San's aria "un Bel Di" at the farewell gala at the old Met.  At the aria's end, she knelt, kissed her hand and touched it to the stage.  After the opera house was torn down, The Times reported in 1997, Albanese cold be seen on some fine days standing amid the rubble, dressed, as if in mourning weeds, in her Butterfly kimono.  Clips of her arias are available on YouTube.


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Thursday, November 16, 2017



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Maria Lassnig, Artist (Sept. 8, 1919 - May 6, 2014)

Maria Lassnig was an Austrian artist known for her painted self-portraits and her theory of "body awareness". She was the first female artist to win the Grand Austrian State Prize in 1988 and was awarded the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art in 2005. Lassnig lived and taught in Vienna from 1980 until her death.
In one self-portrait, she stares at you with an expression of scalding horror, but it's not her eyes that draw your gaze.  What demands immediate attention is the black gun pointed straight at you. There is a gun in her other hand, directed at her own brain.  Painted in her eighties, the title of the painting is "You or Me."  Her body, with the small flap of belly, the wilting breasts, the dead-chicken skin of her thighs,
               radiates self-loathing. 
           
              Lassnig studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna during the Nazi
              years, when the instruction was strictly classical and the walls were brown,
              stripped of degenerate modernists' vivid hues.  She internalized the
              brown.  She moved to America, but no one liked her art.   She returned to
              Vienna where she became the first female professor of painting in a
              German speaking country. 

              Lassnig often described her art as emerging from "body-awareness," a
              disciplined hypersensitivity to the workings of her internal organs  she    paints pain, thought, blood and breath as if they were objects she cold hold and scrutinize. 
        

Wednesday, November 15, 2017


Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, CBE, Artist (b. June 8, 1912)
 
Barns-Graham, known as Willie, was one of the foremost British abstract artists, a member of the influential Penwith Society of Arts.  As a child she showed very early signs of creative ability. Determining while at school that she wanted to be an artist, she set her sights on Edinburgh College of Art where, after some dispute with her father, she enrolled in 1931, and after periods of illness, from which she graduated with her diploma in 1937.  According to the Financial Times critic, she produced her best work in the decade before her death, aged 91, in 2004.  "Now I am at a stage of urgency," she said in 2001.  "My theme is celebration of life, joy, the importance of color, form, space ad texture.  Brushstrokes that can be happy, risky, thin, fat, fluid and textured.  Having a positive mind and constantly being aware and hopefully being allowed to live longer to increase this celebration."
Court Ladies in the Inner Palace
(detail) c. 1465-1509 by Du Jin

Although the picture is blurry, it shows Chinese ladies playing soccer in the 15th century.  One of them has a dainty foot extended and a big round ball in the air above it.  Soccer is an English invention, but if you thought that the English male was the first person to put foot to an inflated ball, you are hundreds of years out of date.  Chinese palace ladies were already practicing their passing inside the bamboo fence. 

Chinese ladies are also ahead of the men, playing golf in a level surface of a palace garden.  On the same garden scroll they are to be seen wielding a sort of proto-putting ball into the middle of their group.  This proto-golf was called chuiwan

Female Figures - detail of soccer  Du Jin 杜堇 (painted late 15th to early 16th centuries).  Women (and men) played games to keep fit and pass the time. You might have been surprised by.  the first section of this painting showing field hockey, but both field hockey and soccer - with rule variations.  had been played in China and throughout the ancient world for thousands of years. The  Chinese invented soccer during the early Han Dynasty (206 BC - 220 AD), as a means to keep fit.
Rebecca Solnit, Author (b. June 24, 1961)
 
Writer, historian, and activist Rebecca Solnit is the author of twenty books on feminism, western and indigenous history, popular power, social change and insurrection, wandering and walking, hope and disaster, including a trilogy of atlases and the books The Mother of All Questions, Hope in the Dark, Men Explain Things to Me; The Faraway Nearby; A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster; A Field Guide to Getting Lost; Wanderlust: A History of Walking; and River of Shadows, Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West (for which she received a Guggenheim, the National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism, and the Lannan Literary Award). A product of the California public education system from kindergarten to graduate school, she is a columnist at Harper’s.

After a party at which a man insisted on telling her about one of her own books, which he had not read, Solnit wrote:  "Yes, people of both genders pop up at events and hold forth . . . but the out-and-out confrontational confidence of the totally ignorant is, in my experience, gendered.  Men explain things to me, and other women, whether or not they know what they are talking about."  She adds a qualifier: "Some men.'  But this essay went viral because many women - many, many women - know exactly what Solnit is talking about.

Why are women such as Solnit being embraced after years of producing outstanding work?  Perhaps it's because no one listens to them the first time they speak.
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Jan Dalley, Arts Editor, Financial Times

Examining the issue of why women artists in their late life are suddenly garnering world-wide recognition, she first suggests that the early period of these women's live is accounted for by their looks.  'In a world slavishly devoted to youthfulness, are middle-aged women just intrinsically boring?  Do we only get interesting again in late age, when we no longer remind people uncomfortably of their mothers?"

Or perhaps we're looking at the particular life circumstances of women born in the first part of the 20th century.  Successful creators, like successful criminals, need means, motive and opportunity. Motive is hardly a problem.  Means and opportunity?  However self-denying one is, there's a basic requirement of money and time.  Just being able to sell a work was a huge hurdle from some of these women, early on; public galleries with their male curators were often uninterested.  And time is essential - not just the freedom from one's children but sometimes form other family members.  The artist Paula Rego, now highly successful at 79, looked after her older and then much better-known artist husband, Victor Willing.  Only after his death did Rego find her real subject matter" - rage.

But there's something else too, something interior.  It's about psychological permission: about allowing yourself to strive and be successful.  For women of these generations, perhaps only the post-maternal, post-sexualized self could grasp at the freedoms all creative people need.





Celia Paul, Artist (b. Nov. 11, 1959)

Celia Paul is an Indian-born British artist. She is a British Citizen. From 1976–81 she studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where she met Lucian Freud who was a visiting tutor. She had a relationship with Freud between 1978 and 1988 and has a son by him, Frank Paul, who is also an artist. Celia Paul appears in several paintings by Freud, including Girl in a Striped Nightshirt.

Paul paints her family and close fiends, her Spartan studio in London's Bloomsbury, and the vista from it.  With these limited subjects, she digs deep, moves slowly, refines nuance, and takes the viewer wonderfully into her own world.  Her portraits are loosely painted in delicate white-grey-brown tonalities, and turn crucially on light effects.  Sun streaming into the studio at varying hour s and seasons marks time and its passing, while an inner glow emanates from each figure. 
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Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Dame Laura Knight, DBE RA RWS, Painter

Knight was an English artist who worked in oils, water colours, etching, engraving and dry point. Knight was a painter in the figurative, realist tradition and who embraced English Impressionism. In her long career, Knight was among the most successful and popular painters in Britain. Her success in the male-dominated British art establishment paved the way for greater status and recognition for women artists.


Her self-portrait (1913) showing her fully clothed profile with a nude model was decried as a vulgar "artistic exercise" that should have remained in her studio.  Men's right to represent the female body had never been questioned.  Knight, however, had been banned from life classes while at Nottingham School of Art.  By the time Knight painted it she was 36, and by her own admission, "able to sell everything I touched."  In 1946 she was sent to Nuremberg to paint the war trials.   In "The Nuremberg Trial" (1946) she makes a rare break with realism to dissolve the courtroom into a derelict cityscape that represents postwar Nuremberg.  Chiefly, however, this is a masterly chronicle of  what philosopher Hannah Arendt dubbed the banality of evil.  Sandwiched between barristers and soldiers, the Nazis - including Goering, Hess and Speer - are respectable white-haired gents whose relaxed demeanor, as they whisper and take notes, suggests they have registered neither the enormity of their rimes nor the depths of their fall. 
Helen Frankenthaler, Artist (Dec. 12, 1928-December 27, 2011)

Helen Frankenthaler was an American abstract expressionist painter. She was a major contributor to the history of postwar American painting. Having exhibited her work for over six decades, she spanned several generations of abstract painters while continuing to produce vital and ever-changing new work. Frankenthaler began exhibiting her large-scale abstract expressionist paintings in contemporary museums and galleries in the early 1950s. She was included in the 1964 Post-Painterly Abstraction exhibition curated by Clement Greenberg that introduced a newer generation of abstract painting that came to be known as Color Field. Born in Manhattan, she was influenced by Greenberg, Hans Hofmann, and Jackson Pollock's paintings. Her work has been the subject of several retrospective exhibitions, including a 1989 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and been exhibited worldwide since the 1950s. In 2001, she was awarded the National Medal of Arts.

Rumiko Takahashi, Japanese manga artist (b.  October 10, 1957)

With a career of several commercially successful works, beginning with Urusei Yatsura in 1978, Takahashi is one of Japan's most affluent manga artists. Her works are popular worldwide, where they have been translated into a variety of languages, with over 200 million copies in circulation. She has twice won the Shogakukan Manga Award: once in 1980 for Urusei Yatsura, and again in 2001 for Inuyasha.

Judith Kerr, Author and Illustrator of children's books (b. June 14, 1923)

Ker has created both enduring picture books such as the Mog series and The Tiger Who Came to Tea and acclaimed novels for older children such as the semi-autobiographical When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, which gave a child's-eye view of the Second World War. Born in Germany, of Jewish background, she came to Britain with her family in 1933 amid the rise of the Nazis.  Her 2013 autobiography, Judith Kerr's Creatures, recounted the story of her parents' exile.  While her parents' lives were destroyed, Kerr and her brother thrived in England and never looked back. 


Her father, Alfred Kerr, was a famed theatre critic and essayist who annoyed everyone, frequently mocking the Nazis.   They fled to England following Hitler's rise to power. 
Alice Elizabeth Kober, American Classicist and Archaeologist
Dec. 23, 1906-May 16, 1950

Alice Elizabeth Kober was an American classicist best known for extensive investigations that eventually led to the decipherment of Linear B. The daughter of Hungarian immigrants, Kober was born in Yorkville, a neighborhood on Manhattan's Upper East Side. She attended Hunter College High School, and in the summer of 1924, she placed third in a New York City scholarship contest. The $100-a-year prize helped her to attend Hunter College, where she majored in Latin, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and graduated magna cum laude. She earned a master's degree in classics at Columbia University in 1929 and a PhD in 1932.

One of the most tantalizing mysteries of the modern age centered on a long-lost script from Aegean antiquity known as Linear B.  Inscribed on clay tablets around 1450 B.C., Linear B was unearthed in 1900 on Crete, amid the ruins of a lavish Bronze Age palace.  No one knew what language it recorded, much less what it said.  The mystery endured for more than 50 years.  In 1952 Michael Ventris, a brilliant melancholic English architect who had been obsessed with Linear B since he was a boy.  But there is a quiet backstage figure behind the towering public one.  Like Rosalind Franklin, whose work, long unacknowledged, informed the mapping of the structure of DNA, The figure behind Ventris's achievement was Alice Elizebeth Kober. 
 
Each night after her classes were taught and her papers graded, she sat at the table in the house she shared with her widowed mother and, cigarette burning beside her, sifted the strange Cretan inscriptions.  She cataloged every word and every character of Liner B on homemade index cards, cut painstakingly by hand from whatever she could find.  On her cards she noted statistics on every character of the script.  Ventris and Kober met only once, but from through her few, rigorous published articles, which together form a ho-to manual for deciphering an unknown script, she handed Ventris the key to the locked room.  After her death, he attacked the mystery with renewed vigor and brought about its solution.  It is now clear that without Dr. Kober's work, Ventris cold never have deciphered Linear B when he did, if ever.  Her archives are at the University of Texas.
 
 

Monday, November 13, 2017

Mary Ruefle, Poet (b. 1952)  "Pause"

Hot flashes are the least of menopause, Ruefle tells the young woman she imagines might be reading.  You will want to drive a knife through your heart; you will want to leave your lover, no matter how much you have loved them.  You will feel as though your life is over, because it is.  You will realize for the first time that your whole life people have looked at you because you are a woman and people look at women - but now, suddenly you are invisible.  But then something magical happens:

"You are a woman, the ten years [of menopause] have passed, you love your children, you love your lover, but there are no longer any persons on earth who can stop you from being yourself . . . You would never want to be a girl again for any reason at all, you have discovered that being invisible is the biggest secret on earth, the most wondrous gift anyone could have given you. 



Ritha Devi, Classical Indian Dancer (d. Sept. 12, 2017 age 92)

Over her father's objections, Devi began studying classical dance after graduating from Bombay university.  Married in 1940, she learned that her husband disliked dance and told her "No dance.  Nothing.  You have to become a housewife."  Instead she divorced him and began performing to support herself and her son.  It was while she was on tour that a New York University faculty member in the audience approached Devi and asked her to teach.  She remained in New York for 35 years, teaching, continuing to perform and staring a dance academy.  Later in life, Devi attributed her stamina in dancing for hours at a time to the enduring struggle she faced as a young woman in perusing her love of dance against the wishes of the men in her life.

Elisabet, female jester
By Jan Sanders van Hemessen (c. 1504-1556)

Elisabet was employed as a court fool by Anne of Hungary, wife of Ferdinand I, Archduke of Austria and later Holy Roman Emperor.  Nothing is known about her but the amount of gold on her clothing and the letter in her hand indicate that she occupied a secure position in the court and possibly could read.  Her impish expression suggests that she had a wry wit.

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Claire Messud, Novelist b. 1966
New York Times Magazine August 13, 2017

One of our foremost chroniclers of women's hidden appetites


Her mother attempted to go to law school but chose to quit when the pressures of her family and her husband overcame her.  She never spoke of it again, but her mouth would close into a thin line and she would leave the room when law school was mentioned  Later, suffering from dementia   she said "There's so much of life to get through after you realize that none of your dreams will come true." 

Messud too confessed dismay at the encroachment of day-to-day demands on intellectual life.  There are trade-offs.  But more life is more life.  And if you're in the business of life . . . I had a sense that the costs were high and I didn't want that to be my fate.  I had a sense that's I'd better not learn to cook, which I never did.  And I had a sense that you have to be ruthless in some way.  And she chose as her partner someone who was raised with the expectation that fathers share in the child care and housework, and who, as she puts it, would do "never less than 50 percent" with what she calls "very careful subconscious Darwinian selection." 

If Messud is angry about something, it's the social constructs that work against women's ambition and desire, rendering them invisible or even snuffing them out.   The literary taboo on women with "unseemly" emotions is just part of a problem female writers and readers have long been articulation:  a male dominated literary canon offering a restricted vision of women's possibilities.   Readers crave depictions of women as real, as flawed, as people who can't be constrained by a predetermined narrative, not just women in relation to men.  Her work quietly seethes at the idea that a woman needs to be "likable" - or that a man should be the judge of her liability. 



Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Yvonne Brill Aeronautical scientist 1924-2013
Rocket woman who gave satellites their soundness of thrust

Yvonne Madelaine Brill was a Canadian-American propulsion engineer best known for her development of rocket and jet propulsion technologies. During her career she was involved in a broad range of national space programs in the United States, including NASA.  Conscious of her role as a pioneer both for her sex and in her field, she urged girls to study maths and science.  In 2010 she was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, along with the creators of Post-its, prompting ironic comment that it took two men to come up with slightly sticky stationery and one woman to discover how to keep satellites aloft.  Her achievements were remarkable with someone with no engineering degree, thought at was through no fault of her own.  The University of Manitoba in her native Canada rejected her application for its course on the grounds that it required fieldwork for which there were not female facilities on-site.   

Beate Sirota Gordon, Consitutionalist 1923-2012
Interpreter who wove women's rights in the fabric of Japan

Douglas MacArthur assembled a fair-sized galaxy of talent after WWII to help reshape a defeated Japan, and that included giving the country a constitution for its post-feudal existence.  But the US general could not have imaged that one of the most important contributors to the process would be 22-year-old female interpreter on his staff.  Sirota Gordon was the daughter of a Ukrainian-born concert of some renown who had grown up partially in Japan, and was "the only woman in the room" (the name of her autobiography) among the two dozen men on the constitutional committee.  Almost single-handedly she drafted articles 14 and 24 of the document, giving Japanese women the civil rights they had not previously possessed.  After a 50 year veil of silence her military superiors began talking about it and she became something of a heroine in Japan.  There is no provision in the US constitution guaranteeing women the rights they enjoy in Japan. 




Monday, October 2, 2017

Financial Times, April, 2016

Joan Eardley, Painter
Scottish 1921-1963

Joan Earldey was born within a decade of Lucian Freud.   Her originality lies in two bodies of work: portraits of Glasgow tenement children, and the winter seascapes of Catterline, the Scottish fishing village where she lived alone in a cliff-top cottage from the mid-1950's.  Eardley's street children are often painted in pastel on fine glass paper, lending sparkle and spontaneity, look powerful in the obdurate sense of self, and vulnerable.


Sunday, September 3, 2017


Sally Yates, former Chief, Department of Justice
Fired by Donald Trump after she refused to defend his controversial travel ban against Muslims


deputy attorney general sally yates at the justice department deputy ...

How did she respond to letters from young women?  "It feels weird to talk about this," she says.  "There was always this delicate balance of wanting to be assertive but not be abrasive because you weren't really accepted if you were a woman and you were considered too aggressive.  I don't get the sense that younger women today have to worry about that as much as we did when I was coming up.  That's a really good thing."
During the Women's March she was shopping at a Whole Foods in DC when the store became overwhelmed with protesters.  "I just stood back against the frozen food and just watched these young women carrying signs.  They were so comfortable in their own skin, there were so comfortable that they had a view and there were expressing it and they weren't the least bit sheepish.  And I thought, this is great, this is how it's supposed to be.  So maybe we're in a time when women are finding their voice." 

Friday, September 1, 2017

Hannah Gluckstein, Painter (1895-1978)
Wikipedia

Gluck was born into a wealthy Jewish family in London. Gluck attended St. John's Wood School of Art between 1913 and 1916 before moving to west Cornwall and joining the artists' colony there.  In the 1920s and 30s Gluck became known for portraits and floral paintings. Gluck insisted on being known only as Gluck, "no prefix, suffix, or quotes", and when an art society of which she was vice president identified Gluck as "Miss Gluck" on its letterhead, Gluck resigned. Gluck identified with no artistic school or movement and showed her work only in solo exhibitions, where it was displayed in a special frame Gluck invented and patented. This Gluck-frame rose from the wall in three tiers; painted or papered to match the wall on which it hung, it made the artist's paintings look like part of the architecture of the room.  This self-portrait is an accurate representation of her looks.

Thursday, July 27, 2017



Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming (1857–1911)
Harvard University Open Collections Program
Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming was born in Dundee, Scotland, on May 15, 1857. Her talent in school was obvious from an early age, and at age 14 she began teaching in the Dundee public schools. In 1877 she married James Fleming, and a year later the couple immigrated to Boston to start a new life in America. In 1879, when she was pregnant with her first child, James left her and their unborn son.
Only 23 years old and a single mother, Fleming found employment as the housekeeper for Edward Pickering, a professor of astronomy at Harvard and the director of the Harvard College Observatory. Irritated by the poor work done by his male employees at the observatory, Pickering reportedly declared that his maid could do a better job, and shortly thereafter, in 1881, he hired Fleming to do some clerical work and mathematical calculations at the Observatory.
Fleming quickly proved Pickering right by developing a new system to classify stars according to their spectra, or the unique pattern of lines caused by the refraction of a star's light through a prism. Thanks to her new classification system, which became known as the "Pickering-Fleming System," Fleming cataloged over 10,000 stars within the next nine years. In 1890, she published her findings in the Draper Catalogue of Stellar Spectra.
Pickering eventually put Fleming in charge of editing all studies published by the Harvard Observatory and allowed her to hire dozens of young women to support her expanding stellar exploration efforts. One of these young women was Henrietta Swan Leavitt, who later discovered how to measure the universe. In 1898, the Harvard Corporation appointed Fleming to be the curator of astronomical photographs at the Harvard College Observatory, making her the first woman to hold this important position.
During the course of her career, Fleming discovered 10 novae, 52 nebulae, and 310 variable stars—a remarkable achievement for someone without a formal education in astronomy. Recognizing her contributions to the discipline, in 1906 the Royal Astronomical Society elected Fleming to its organization, the first time that prestigious body admitted an American woman. In 1910, she reached the pinnacle of her career by discovering white dwarfs, which are very hot and dense stars that are white in color. On May 21, 1911, Fleming died of pneumonia in Boston, Massachusetts.