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Richard Tweedy letters from Europe

 Collection
Identifier: KA-0156-01

Abstract

The collection consists of 53 handwritten letters from Richard Tweedy during his time in Holland with William Merritt Chase's 1903 summer abroad program, and from a later period when Tweedy lived in Paris. (One 1906 letter is from his home in New Hampshire.) The letters are mostly addressed to Tweedy's mother, Mary Alice Belcher Tweedy, while a few are addressed to his brother and to his father. Typed transcriptions of each letter are included.

Dates

  • 1903-1914
  • circa 2021

Creator

Extent

.25 Cubic Feet (4 folders)

0.7254 Gigabytes (1 USB flash drive)

Language of Materials

English

French

Content Description

This collection consists of 53 handwritten letters and postcards from American artist Richard Tweedy (1876-1952) sent primarily during his first trip to Europe, from July 1903 to May 1904, and during a subsequent trip, from October 1913 to February 1914. The majority of the correspondence is addressed to Tweedy’s mother, Mary Alice Belcher Tweedy, with four letters addressed to his father, James Fisher Tweedy, and one addressed to Richard’s brother, Alfred, all in New York State. In the letters, Tweedy generally writes about his daily activities and observations, his painting work, the weather, and events he attends while abroad. The letters also mention Tweedy’s opinions of several French and American artist contemporaries, including Charles Cottet, Lucien Simon, and John Singer Sargent.

The first series of letters are initially written from the Hotel Minerva in Haarlem, the Netherlands, where Tweedy attended an art class for American students taught by William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), who founded the Chase School of Art in New York (later, Parsons School of Design). Tweedy describes the sights and customs of the Netherlands, his work copying masterpieces in Dutch galleries, including The Hague, his impressions of Chase, and his desire to extend his allowance in order to study independently in Paris. From September 1903 to May 1904, Tweedy writes from Paris, having secured additional funds from his father to study there after Chase’s class disbanded, and having rented a studio at 12 Rue de Seine. Tweedy describes his time copying artworks in the Louvre and Luxembourg galleries, his visits to important places in Paris such as the Church of Saint Sulpice, the Paris Opera, and the Palace of Versailles, student meetings, visits from acquaintances, his expenses, his opinions on the Protestant and Catholic Churches in France, and various art exhibitions, including one in which one of his original paintings is displayed.

The allowance money from Tweedy’s father ceased in March 1904; however, a check sent from his mother allowed him to stay in Paris until May, after the opening of the 1904 salon of the Société des Artistes Français, which featured Tweedy’s painting, occurred. One letter written by Tweedy to his mother from Washington, New Hampshire, in 1906, is included, and the second series is written from Tweedy’s subsequent stay in Paris, where he rented a studio at 83 Boulevard Montparnasse.

Also included in the collection are typed transcripts of the letters created by Bruce Wiegand, a relation of Tweedy’s granddaughter Meghan Tweedy, a registry form and a ticket for the 1904 salon exhibition of the Société des Artistes Français in which Tweedy participated, photographs that Tweedy occasionally sent with his letters, including one of William Merritt Chase and his students, and a playing card designed by Tweedy. Correspondence sent in answer to Tweedy’s letters is not included in the collection.

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research use. Please contact archivist@newschool.edu for appointment.

Conditions Governing Use

To publish images of material from this collection, permission must be obtained in writing from the New School Archives and Special Collections. Please contact: archivist@newschool.edu.

Biographical note

Richard Tweedy was born November 16, 1876 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the third of five children of James Fisher Tweedy, a stockbroker, and Mary Alice Belcher Tweedy, a writer. In 1881 the family moved to New York City. Tweedy attended Grammar School No. 46 on 156th Street and graduated June 13, 1892.

Richard’s artistic training included attending one season of the Antique Class at the Art Schools of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, completing the full course with honor in May 1893. During October 1895 - October 1900, Tweedy enrolled in painting and drawing classes at the Art Students League in NYC. Tweedy studied with H. Siddons Mowbray and also with William Merritt Chase in New York and in Europe. He was accepted for the abroad program in February 1903.

In 1903, his work was exhibited at the Old Salon in Paris. His work was exhibited at the New York Society of Independent Artists 1917-1919.

Tweedy married Lucy Hunter Wilmot in November 1919. They had two boys, Richard, Jr. and John Hunter Tweedy in 1920 and 1926.

Richard died July 4, 1952 at age 75. He was buried at New Cemetery, Washington, Sullivan County, New Hampshire, USA.

Adapted from a longer, illustrated biography by Bruce Wiegand included in the collection.

Arrangement

Letters arranged chronologically.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Donated to The New School Archives by Meghan S. Tweedy, Richard Tweedy's granddaughter, in 2021.

Related Materials

Richard Tweedy is depicted in a photograph present in The New School Archives' Eugene Paul Ullman papers (KA.0042.01). Both Tweedy and Ullman were with William Merritt Chase in Europe in 1903.

Processing Information

The collection includes a USB 3.0 Flash Drive drive with all pages of the letters scanned as jpgs and pdf files consisting of transcriptions of each letter. The transcriptions and scanning, as well as a detailed biographical note, were created by Bruce Wiegand, husband of the donor's cousin, Beth Stoner (Beth Wiegand).

Title
Guide to the Richard Tweedy letters from Europe
Status
Completed
Author
Jason Adamo
Date
June 15, 2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin