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Duveneck legacy thrives in California,It’s more than famous art worksBy JAMES OTTA varied cache of art treasures adorned the Monterey home of the late Hope Duveneck Williams, the last living grandchild of renowned artists Frank and Elizabeth Boott Duveneck. Hope lived on a hilltop in view of California 1 and Monterey Bay, famous for the deep underwater canyon teeming with varied marine life. I visited her in June, 2014, in her residence in the respectable “up the hill” locale of Monterey so described in Steinbeck’s short novel, Cannery Row, the story of denizens of a fishing shack near the shore. I was doing research on the Duveneck family for my biography, published in 2016, The Greatest Brush, Love, Tragedy and Redemption of Artist Frank Duveneck. I was eager to hear what Hope had to say. She was the closest tie to Duveneck (1848-1919), our region’s likely greatest contribution to the creative world. I found a sprightly nonagenarian, a pottery artist, very down to earth. Physically she reminded me of her activist mother, Josephine Whitney Duveneck, who established a youth hostel and summer camp on their 2,000-acre estate, Hidden Villa Ranch, in the Los Altos Hills. Yet there was in her face and figure a component of the tall lanky mustachioed man I shook hands with, Frank Jr., only child of Frank Duveneck, a retired engineering professor when he visited Covington in the late 1960s. The next several hours with Hope were enlightening. She talked easily about her famous family, grandparents from artistic successes of the nineteenth century and her parents, locally prominent in California through the mid-20th century and purveyors of the enduring Duveneck legacy in Hidden Villa Ranch and its mission of land preservation, social justice and environmental education. Hope knew personally neither of her grandparents. Elizabeth Boott Duveneck died in 1888 in Paris. Her grandfather Frank passed in 1919 in Cincinnati when she was less than a year old living in California. She spoke of them in terms of their legacies, relayed family talk about them, and addressed their works of art which remain in demand and highly valued today. Paintings and sketches not displayed were carefully stored in the well-shaded ranch-style residence. She had no single favorite among her grandparents’ art works, though she was in her words “fond” of four Frank Duveneck paintings which hung on the wall of her sitting room. The most prominent, Girl in Boat, was painted in 1912 reflecting an Impressionist style the artist later adopted. The young woman is leaning on a railing. She wears a high-collared white blouse and a wind-blown straw hat. A red bow tie matches the color of a fluttering band on her hat. The sunburned and smiling face of the subject evokes the sense of a holiday on the shore. Serving as backdrop is the gauzy harbor of the resort and fishing town of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Duveneck spent holidays and many summers, visiting his son in nearby Boston where he was being reared by Lizzie’s relatives. Hope said a rendering of Brace’s Rock, a well-known site in Gloucester harbor, was an exercise in her grandfather’s teaching methods, not quite finished and demonstrating to students where to focus attention—on the rock itself. She admired his work, the Professor, the face of an educator emerging from a dark background, an oil portrait from his early Munich period, following a style known as Realism, reminiscent of classicists Frans Hals and Rembrandt. The final of the foursome was a standing nude, one of many executed in Cincinnati around the start of the twentieth century. Among Hope’s treasures were oils, water colors and sketches by her grandmother Elizabeth Boott Duveneck, known as Lizzie. An expatriate and an heiress of a New England textile fortune, Lizzie was especially talented in drawing and water colors. She trained in Europe and in Boston, and is widely regarded as a forerunner of today’s women artists. She studied with Duveneck in Munich and was instrumental in moving Frank’s class of young artists, the Duveneck Boys, to Florence, Italy, her home. In Florence is where the youthful art students gained fame as the fictionalized Inglehart boys in Hamilton, Ohio-bred William Dean Howells’ 1886 novel, Indian Summer. Hope and her three siblings, Barney, Francis and Liz, acquired shares of the family-owned treasures during the 1970s. Their mother Josephine Whitney Duveneck unveiled the cache one day at Hidden Villa. She told them she wanted the artworks to be seen, not hidden away. She chose a random method to distribute the works, set out playing cards and allowed each of the four to pick up one card. The holder of the highest card in that particular round had first choice. Hope collected her favored four paintings, another oil of a merchant ship in what appears to be the harbor in Venice, and one of a young Italian child by her grandmother. She also chose numerous well-drawn and colored sketches by Lizzie. The Duveneck family in California has been generous with gifts of art. They gave paintings to the Kenton County Library in the 1960s, including one of Mollie Duveneck, Frank’s half-sister, who lived with him in Covington at 1232 Greenup Street. More than 600 art works, paintings, studies and etchings, and several sculptures, have been identified as definitely his. Other works of art may be unaccounted for in Cincinnati area homes that show the Duveneck touch as he worked closely with students at the Cincinnati Art Academy and often polished students’ efforts. He taught at the academy continuously from 1901 until his death. The largest collection of Duveneck’s paintings is found in the Cincinnati Art Museum. In 1915, after winning a gold medal at the Panama Pacific Exposition in San Francisco, the painter donated more than 140 works to the museum. The collection has grown and many works are in climate-controlled storage, brought out for special exhibits. The museum is working on a traveling exhibit to commemorate the centenary of Duveneck’s death in 1919. Museum officials are participating with individuals from other area organizations and institutions in a Year of Duveneck events in 2019 that will focus on the artist, his works and his legacy Duveneck is not only known as a Cincinnati artist. Other areas have claimed him. He is included among Boston artists in a survey by the artist-art historian R.H. Ives Gammell. On the international front, Frank’s works are highly regarded as representing the Munich school. Most notably, Frank and Elizabeth Duveneck’s works were highlighted in a 2012 exhibit in Italy, titled Americans in Florence. The American Art Review, a contemporary pictorial journal of exhibitions, frequently publishes photographs of Duveneck art, either in gallery advertisements or to illustrate articles. Hope was familiar with family legends in part from her mother Josephine’s two books, Frank Duveneck, Painter-Teacher, and her mother’s autobiography, Life on Two Levels. For the artist’s biography, Josephine had the resource of kept notes from lengthy discussions with Frank while she and Frank Jr. lived in Cincinnati before World War I. Frank’s recollections of growing up in Covington and his many interests and events throughout his life in Europe constituted much of her privately printed 1970 book. “She was very fond of him, and he, of her,” Hope recalled. Though the marriage of Frank and Lizzie is historically distant, Hope has opinions about the difficulties her grandparents faced when they were first engaged around 1880. Lizzie’s father Francis Boott, a Boston Brahmin, opposed the marriage. He was “appalled,” she said, learning that Duveneck’s stepfather, Squire Duveneck, operated a beer garden in Covington. Other Boston family and friends disapproved including the author Henry James. Lizzie and Frank’s engagement ended in 1881. James’s role in the affair remains ambiguous. He was Lizzie’s friend and exchanged with her more than 80 letters, some written in Italian. He referred to her as Cara Lisa. In turn she wrote to him as Cara Enrico. He was so close that Lizzie and Francis Boott served as models for fictional expatriate characters in his Portrait of a Lady and The Golden Bowl. James believed the class difference between the two would be fatal to a long-standing union. He had also written that Duveneck was a kindly and talented man but he called him illiterate and lazy, and he had forecast a doubtful future for him as an artist. “Henry James was a snob,” said Hope. She believed the author was in love with Lizzie and found in Duveneck a strong competitor. “It’s just a feeling,” she said. True love, however, conquered all for Frank and Lizzie. Mr. Boott later approved of the 1886 marriage, though he secured a prenuptial agreement (which is on file in Kenton County Court), establishing Lizzie as the sole owner of her financial interests. The birth of Frank Jr. later in 1886 changed everything. Mr. Boott repudiated the agreement. The newly expanded family, grandfather, Frank and Lizzie and baby Frank, kept residence in Villa Castellani on Bellosguardo hill outside of Florence. Hope was familiar with Cincinnati from visits over the years and the Duveneck House at 1232 Greenup Street in Covington. She recalled with pleasure seeing her grandfather’s murals in the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption painted by him 1905-1910. She also saw the elaborate study of the murals in a triptych which hangs in the board room of Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati. The granddaughter knew and loved her uncle, Charlie Duveneck, the last surviving sibling of the Covington family. After his brother, Frank’s death in 1919, Charlie at first visited and then later moved to Hidden Villa. Hope said she was his favorite among the four Duveneck children. In those years he would take her to the thoroughbred horse races in San Francisco. They would look over horses in the paddock and study the histories and lay bets, usually $2.50. “We never made any money,” Hope says, but she had lots of fun. She said Uncle Charlie did not resemble his famous half-brother, her artist grandfather, who stood a robust five-foot-nine and had a full head of light-colored hair. Charlie must have favored his thin and angular mother, Katherine Siemers Duveneck. In letters from the artist Duveneck over the years, Charlie emerges as a kind of beloved character known for his fun-loving ways. “He spoiled me and I loved it.” A widow of physician Russell Williams, Hope kept in close touch with nieces and nephews in California and around the country. She took pride in her family and her mother, a daughter of privilege, a Whitney from New York, a writer known for her social conscience. In her autobiography, Josephine detailed a personal search for meaning in life, wrote of the joys of family living and the responsibility of people to serve others. As a result the Duveneck name in the Bay area region means more than talent in art. Starting in the 1940s, the family created a haven for the disadvantaged in society. They operated summer camps for the poor at Hidden Villa and opened it to refugees from Nazi Germany, Japanese-Americans interned during World War II, and field workers from Cesar Chavez’s unionization movement in California. After the deaths of Frank Jr., former professor of engineering at Stanford University, and Josephine, Hope and her siblings dedicated 2,000 acres of Hidden Villa to the Mid-Peninsula Regional Open Space District and the Trust for Hidden Villa, which has continued the Duveneck legacy of service. In gratitude for the family’s service to the community, a school in Palo Alto was named, Duveneck Elementary. Hope, who died in August, 2017, at age 99 years, carried on the Duveneck social legacy on a personal level. She put to use her graduate degree in occupational therapy from the University of Southern California by working with disabled youth. She was a talented potter and sold creations, often animal and dinner ware at Peninsula Potters in Pacific Grove, California. Perhaps recalling her family’s strong and deep Cincinnati connections, a favorite subject was handmade flying pigs.--James Ott is a freelance writer from Crescent Springs. His biography of Frank Duveneck was published in 2016 by Branden Books of Boston. ................
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