by
Joan K. Yanni
Whether we discuss the
Ashcan School or women in art, one painting demands attention: Woman with Ermine Collar (83.13) by Kathleen McEnery (Cunningham).
Woman with Ermine Collar |
Kathleen McEnery
(1885-1971) was known to many Rochesterians—even some docents! She was a
friend of Charlotte Whitney Allen, Hildegard Watson, Helen Ellwanger, Clayla
Ward, Fritz Trautman—to name a few. She was a member of the MAG art
committee from 1945 to 1971, and was named an honorary life member of the MAG
Board in 1927. She was said to be elegant and slightly arrogant and a
great conversationalist—and she hosted formal luncheons at which she personally
tossed salad at the table.
McEnery was born in
Brooklyn but grew up in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. She studied at
New York's Pratt Institute, then became a student of Robert Henri, first at the
New York School of Art and later (the summers of 1906 and 1908) with his class
in Spain. When Henri implied that she had enough formal classes, she went
to Paris, living in a pension with an older cousin as chaperon. Woman with Ermine Collar was painted there.
After a productive
period of work in Paris, she returned to NYC and rented a studio with other
artists on the upper West Side. In 1913 artist friend Leon Kroll
submitted two of her works to the Armory Show; both were accepted. They
were rather daring for a woman of that era: Going to the Bath was a study of two female nudes, and The Dream, a half-length female nude. Both are now owned by the
National Museum of American Art.
In 1914 McEnery married
Francis E. Cunningham, whom she had met through his cousin, Rufis Dryer, an
artist who was also a Henri
student. Cunningham was part of the
Cunningham Carriage Factory in
Rochester (the source of our Aurora weathervane), which made
carriages, then automobiles and armored cars and farm machinery.
McEnery continued to
paint regularly in Rochester, even after the births of her daughter and two
sons, in a studio she had built onto her home. Eventually her interest in
painting gave way to her family needs and social responsibilities. She
was among the founders of the Harley School and had been interested in the
Women's Suffrage movement. Her last exhibit was held at the Ferragil Art
Gallery, NYC, in the early 1930s. She died in 1971 at the age of 85.
A memorial exhibition of 30 paintings was organized by the Gallery in her honor
in 1972.
Today the largest body
of her work is owned by her family, particularly her daughter Joan Cunningham
Williams and her son Peter Cunningham. MAG owns six of her works.
Two remain in the Cunningham house, now part of the Museum and Science Center;
a portrait of former RPO concert master Eugene Goosens hangs in the Eastman
School of Music; and a portrait of Charlotte Whitney Allen is in the Eastman
Theatre. There are probably more of her paintings in Rochester, but they
are not on record in our archives.
Woman with Ermine Collar can be used in many tours: women in art,
Rochester art (along with the C. W. Allen collection of Calders and the Watson
collection of sculptures) and the Ashcan school. McEnery's painting has a
modern look to it: the figure is at the front of the canvas, looking
directly at the viewer; the background is dark, like that in many of Henri's
portraits. Who is the woman? So far she is a mystery. Does
she look like a lady, dressed to go to tea? Or is she a Paris prostitute
with worn shoes and shabby dress? Look and decide.
See Grant Holcomb (2001) Voices in the Gallery: Writers on Art.P.85
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