The Art of Acquiring: A Portrait of Etta and Claribel Cone (29 page)

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.

Paris, 1906

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.

Blowing Rock, 1908

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.

Frankfurt, 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.

Other books

La gaviota by Antón Chéjov
Northern Exposure: Compass Brothers, Book 1 by Mari Carr and Jayne Rylon
Dreams of Dani by Jenna Byrnes
The Crow Road by Iain Banks
Last Fairytale, The by Greene, Molly
The Immortal Harvest by L. J. Wallace
Red Letter Day by Colette Caddle
Merry Christmas, Paige by MacKenzie McKade