Helen Farr Sloan

Helen Farr Sloan (24 February 1911 – 13 December 2005) was a patron of the arts, educator, accomplished artist, and the second wife of artist John Sloan.

For higher than fifty years, Helen Farr Sloan quietly created a remarkable profile as an American philanthropist. Following the 1951 death of her husband, John Sloan, one of the most famous American artists of the twentieth century, Helen organized the artist’s land and turned it into an philanthropic instrument to support local, regional, national, and international arts constituencies. She was particularly known for her hold for women entering the fields of art archives and museum studies.

Farr was born in New York City. She was the daughter of Dr. Charles Farr, a New York surgeon, and Helen Woodhull Farr. She graduated high school from the prestigious Brearley School for girls in 1929. Her parents wanted her to attend Bryn Mawr College, but she knew that her interests lay in the arts and a less structured future. She took anatomy classes at Cornell University Medical College and studied weaving, pottery, metalwork, wood carving and jewelry making at the Craft Students League. At sixteen, Helen Farr enrolled in the Art Students League of New York, where she met and studied subsequently John Sloan (1871–1951), who became her lifelong buddy and mentor. In the 1930s Helen spent several summers in New Mexico when the Sloans, where she was an active enthusiast of the Santa Fe art colony. She was married in 1937 for a brief epoch to Wyatt Davis, brother of the abstract player Stuart Davis. In 1944, while Helen Farr was workings as head of the art department at the Nightingale-Bamford School in New York City, Sloan's first wife, Dolly, died, leaving him a widower at age 74. Later that year, Helen's former teacher, called her and invited her to member him in Santa Fe. Farr arrived in Santa Fe in the summer of 1945. They spent the summer collaborating on a folder project and just in the past Farr was set to recompense to New York Sloan proposed and they were married by a justice of the peace.

While her marriage to Sloan lasted lonesome seven years, from 1945 to his death in 1951, Helen Farr Sloan’s loyalty to art was a lifelong commitment. After Sloan’s death, she helped to organize his well-received posthumous retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art and returned to her teaching career and to painting. She furthermore spent her enduring years supporting research virtually her husband and American art chronicles and working overseeing the distribution of his estate. The contents of his studio and his wide-ranging library became a treasure trove for unselfish giving. The recipients of her largesse complement the University of Delaware, Sewell C. Biggs Museum in Dover, Delaware, Smithsonian Institution, the National Gallery of Art, Boston Film and Video Foundation, Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Katonah Museum of Art in New York and the New-York Historical Society. Helen Farr Sloan’s own paintings are held in private and public collections, including the Delaware Art Museum and the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C.

Beginning in 1961, and continuing throughout her life, Helen Farr Sloan nurtured a special membership with the Delaware Art Museum. Because of Helen Farr Sloan’s gifts and scholarship, the Delaware Art Museum received more than 5,000 works including the preeminent gathering of the discharge duty of John Sloan later than virtually all aspect of his career represented. This has made the Delaware Art Museum the leading repository for the chemical analysis of John Sloan, who was noted for his doable images of turn-of-the-century New York City. In the at the forefront 1960s, she next taught art part-time at Regis High School in Manhattan.

In 1999 Teleduction produced a film titled Helen Farr Sloan: An Artistic Vision as share of an initiative to document the lives and careers of notable artists. The initiative was supported by the Delaware Art Museum as a teaching tool in their galleries. The videos were then distributed to public broadcasting stations, schools, and museums forgive of charge. The film premiered upon February 23, 2000 at the Delaware Art Museum.

Helen Farr Sloan died at the age of 94 in Wilmington, Delaware.

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