Elizabeth Shoumatoff

Elizabeth Shoumatoff (née Avinoff) (October 6, 1888 – November 30, 1980) was a Russian-American painter who was best known for painting the Unfinished Portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Other paintings included portraits of Lyndon B. Johnson and Lady Bird Johnson.[1]

Elizabeth Shoumatoff
Born(1888-10-06)October 6, 1888
DiedNovember 30, 1980(1980-11-30) (aged 92)
OccupationPortrait Artist
Known forLast portrait of President Roosevelt (FDR)
Notable work
Portraits of FDR, Frick, Dupont, President Johnson
Spouse(s)Leo Shoumatoff

Early life

Shoumatoff was born in Kharkiv[2] on October 6, 1888, into an aristocratic family in what was then Imperial Russia. Her brother Andrey Avinoff was a prominent entomologist and artist. Elizabeth Shoumatoff went to the United States with her husband Leo Shoumatoff (a member of the Russian Purchasing Commission) in 1917 and after the October Revolution decided to stay there. They eventually made their home on Long Island. Leo Shoumatoff died in 1928 (drowned).

Career

Shoumatoff's extraordinary talent for portraiture brought commissions from some of the most illustrious families in America, Great Britain and Europe. Her clients included members of the Frick, du Pont, Mellon, Woodruff and Firestone families,[1] plus the Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was sitting for her at Warm Springs, Georgia, when he suffered a fatal cerebral hemorrhage on April 12, 1945.[3] When she was working, he said "I have a terrific headache."[4]

Death and legacy

Shoumatoff died in November 1980 at age 92 and her estate donated some of the sketches related to the Unfinished Portrait to the Franklin D. Roosevelt American Heritage Center Museum.[5] Some of her other works and materials from the latter part of her life are now in the Archives of American Art.[6]

gollark: Wait, TKB is storing all messages ever in Redis?
gollark: What are those?
gollark: I wear "crocs", the optimal shoes.
gollark: The second one is less controversially "yours" than the first.
gollark: Those are different things, though. A face recognition model is going to be trained on a lot of people's faces, and can then generically match faces together. You can then use that to encode someone's face into an embedding vector you can use for matching.

References

  1. Shoumatoff, Elizabeth (1991). FDR's Unfinished Portrait: A Memoir. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-3659-6.
  2. "Elizabeth Shoumatoff Papers, 1945-1994 | Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum". www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  3. "Franklin D. Roosevelt Day by Day – April". In Roosevelt History. Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Collections and Programs. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
  4. "FDR's Final Days". History Channel Club. Archived from the original on 2013-05-17. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  5. "Elizabeth Shoumatoff". Elizabeth Shoumatoff. Franklin D. Roosevelt American Heritage Center Museum. Archived from the original on 2008-08-07. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
  6. "Elizabeth Shoumatoff papers, 1945–1991". Archives of American Art. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.