Lenore Thomas Straus

Lenore Thomas Straus (1 November 1909 – 16 January 1988) was an American sculptor and author.

Lenore Thomas Straus
Born Lenore Thomas
1 November 1909
Chicago, Illinois
Died 16 January 1988(1988-01-16) (aged 78)
East Blue Hill, Maine
Nationality American
Education Chicago Art Institute
Known for Sculpture

Life and work

Lenore Thomas was born 1 November 1909 in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of Andrew S. Thomas and Lucy Haagsma, and died at her home in Blue Hill, Maine, on 16 January 1988. Although she studied at the Chicago Art Institute, as a sculptor she was largely self-taught.[1] Much of her early work involved public art created under various New Deal programs, including terra cotta murals for several post offices. She fashioned two major pieces for the Resettlement Administration's planned community in Greenbelt, Maryland—a large Mother and Child[2] and several panels illustrating the Preamble to the United States Constitution.[3] Along with other Public Works Administration artists Hugh Collins, Carmelo Arutu, and Joseph Goethe, she created playground sculpture for Langston Terrace, the first federally funded housing project in Washington, DC.[4] In the early 1940s, when she was living in Accokeek, Maryland, she married Robert Ware Straus, who was to play an integral role in the preservation of the view across the Potomac River from George Washington's home at Mount Vernon.[5] In 1968, she moved to Maine, where she was a student of zen teacher Walter Nowick at Moonspring Hermitage.[6] in Surry, which later became the Morgan Bay zendo. She was an active member of the Morgan Bay zendo,[1] and several of her sculptures remain on its grounds[6]

In 1987, the University of Maine honored her with the Maryann Hartman Award, which recognizes distinguished women of Maine.[7] Shortly after her death in 1988, the Lenore Thomas Straus Scholarship was established in her name at the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, where Straus had taught as an artist-in-residence in 1984 and 1986 and plunged into the medium of handmade paper.[8]

Impact, Social Justice and Artistic Legacy

Working on her art during a pivotal time for artists in the United States as recipient of President Roosevelt's New Deal program, Lenore expanded her creative work. As a member of the Communist Party, along with her husband Robert Ware Straus, Lenore focused on equality for immigrants, along with dignity, personal power and respect for the working poor. The couple's stand on social justice leaned heavily on U.S. Communist affiliations.

"Robert Straus was investigated by the FBI after he recommended two Communists to posts in the Office of Emergency Management (1943)," outlines Mary Kienhol’s 2012 book. In 1952 Lenore was actually investigated by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for her Communist affiliations. Some historical investigators also say that Lenore did admit she was a Communist.

"Lenore allegedly admitted Communist Party membership," adds Keinhol in her book.

These ideals over the years held a large place for Lenore's growing concepts in art, sculpture and writing. Idealized collective beliefs about the social benefits of Communism also became a visible constant at the time for numerous other artists in the 1930s.[9]

The annual campaign by President Franklin Roosevelt's office to reignite the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act each year for almost a decade not only worked to lift the economic down-slope in the United States, but also changed career directions for numerous artists, especially women artists living and working in the 1930s and 1940s. For many this was the first time women were able to make a viable and valuable living as both artist and creative.

It wasn’t until 1952 that Lenore finally took on her youngest and longest-standing art apprentice, Sue Hoya Sellars.[10] In 1953 Lenore met and recognized thirteen year old Sellars as a young and budding teenage artist with exceptional, yet publicly ignored, talent. Lenore Thomas Straus later became Sellars' legal guardian as well as her artistic mentor. Concepts in art outlining the importance of intentionality in creating art became an important creative focus for both Straus and Sellars within their lifetime as artists.

Today's modern movement in the use of art as 'Intentional Creativity' has more recently been taught by Sellars' artist daughter Shiloh Sophia McCloud. In June 2015 the Greenbelt Museum in Greenbelt, Maryland opened an exhibit of Lenore's work called "The Knowing Hands That Carve This Stone: The New Deal Art of Lenore Thomas Straus." This show highlights the work of Lenore Thomas Straus along with the work of Sue Hoya Sellars and Shiloh Sophia McCloud as a demonstration of art reaching the public from a continuing lineage of art and artists.[11]

Gallery

List of selected works

1937 Preamble to the United States Constitution limestone Greenbelt Community Center, Greenbelt Maryland
1939 Delivery of Mail to the Farm glazed terra cotta Post office, Fredonia, Kansas
1939 Mother and Child stone Town center, Greenbelt, Maryland
1939 Rural Life Post office, Covington, Virginia
1940 Frog concrete Langston Terrace playground, Washington, DC
1941 Industries and Agriculture of Leetonia terra cotta relief Post office, Leetonia, Illinois
1943 Springtime Post office, Webster Springs, West Virginia
1967 The Fisherman's Wife Vestvågøy, Lofoten, Norway
Two Headed Sculpture Blue Hill Public Library, Blue Hill, Maine
Seamstress Roosevelt Public School, Roosevelt, New Jersey
Blue Rhinoceros Alice Ferguson Foundation, Accokeek, Maryland
Alice Alice Ferguson Foundation, Accokeek, Maryland
Henry Alice Ferguson Foundation, Accokeek, Maryland

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 "Lenore Thomas Straus obituary". Bangor Daily News. 18 January 1988. p. 11. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  2. "Mother & Child sculpture". DCMemorials.com. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  3. "Constitution Frieze". DCMemorials.com. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  4. Quinn, Kelly Anne (2007). Making Modern Homes: A History of Langston Terrace Dwellings, a New Deal Housing Program in Washington, D.C. (PDF). University of Maryland Digital Repository. pp. 154–156. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  5. Kienholz, M (2012). The Canwell Files: Murder, Arson and Intrigue in the Evergreen State. iUniverse. pp. 238–239. ISBN 9781475948806. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  6. 1 2 "Nowick, Walter (Biography)". Sweeping Zen. 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  7. "Maryann Hartman Awards - 1987 Award Winners". University of Maine. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  8. "Haystack Scholarship Honors Late Sculptor Lenore Thomas Straus". Bangor Daily News. 27 January 1988. p. 28. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  9. "Communism in Washington State - History and Memory: Communist Party and the Arts". University of Wisconsin. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  10. "The Life and Lineage of Sue Hoya Sellars"| publisher=Shiloh Sophia Studios| url=http://www.shilohsophiastudios.com/the-life-and-lineage-of-sue-hoya-sellars/
  11. "Heading to the Museum: Lenore Thomas Straus in honor of Sue Hoya Sellars"| url=http://www.shilohsophiastudios.com/heading-to-the-museum-lenore-thomas-straus-in-honor-of-sue-hoya-sellars/|accessdate=29 August 2016
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