Starving Artist Knifed to Death in Village Room… Famous Artist Dies Penniless and All Alone… Deep in the archives of The Metropolitan Museum of Art are two strange scrapbooks packed with century-old newspaper obituaries of painters, illustrators, sculptors, and photographers, famous and forgotten alike. Somber death notices of luminaries like Claude Monet and Auguste Rodin are preserved on their crumbling pages, side by side with tragic and often grisly stories of obscure artists who met their demise as victims of accident, murder, poverty, and disease. Compiled from 1906 to 1929, the scrapbooks not only memorialize the subjects of these obituaries: they also record graphic and sensationalized news reporting from the heyday of yellow journalism.
Who collected the artists’ obituaries? What was their purpose for the Met Museum? Were the scrapbooks assembled in a nod to Giorgio Vasari’s bestselling sixteenth-century magnum opus, Lives of the Artists, with its hundreds of gossipy artist biographies? When Met Museum archivist Jim Moske chanced upon these fascinating relics forgotten in museum storage, he set out to unravel the mystery of their creation.
Delving into Met employee records, Moske discovered the story of Arthur D'Hervilly, an ex-convict and aspiring artist who was hired in 1894 as a museum guard. By the twilight of his museum career, D’Hervilly had risen to assistant curator of paintings. Occasionally, he was also called upon to serve as the Met media officer. It was apparently in this capacity that in the summer of 1906, he decided to order the National Press Intelligence clipping service to send him any and all U.S. newspaper stories about the deaths of artists. By the time he died thirteen years later, he had assembled a massive chronicle of reportage. D’Hervilly’s colleagues dutifully carried on adding to the scrapbooks until 1929, leaving behind more than three hundred pages crammed with thousands of obituaries.
Deaths of Artists intertwines D'Hervilly's peculiar biography with heart-wrenching, bizarre, outlandish, and darkly comic stories of artists, both successful and abject. Moske's meticulously researched narrative is illustrated with full-page images of scrapbook pages, details of shocking obituary headlines, paintings and sculptures by the artist-subjects, and unique documents from the Met archives. The deaths of artists, seen in the light of their uncommon lives, add up to much more than just a litany of sad endings. This eerie glimpse into a dark side of art history and creative practice illuminates the unique challenges artists face, exceptional risks they take, and the cruel turns of fate that often thwart their efforts.
"Moske, an archivist at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, delves in his textured debut into two forgotten scrapbooks of artists' obituaries that he found at the museum in 2018. Spanning from 1906 to 1929 and conveyed in the "brutal poetry" of Progressive Era journalistic prose, the obituaries occasionally taunt their subjects ("Famous Artist Dies Penniless and All Alone" is the title of an entry describing the 1908 demise of painter Imogene Robinson Morrell) and reinforce stereotypes about an artist's life being tantamount to her work (the 1911 obituary for Elizabeth St. John Mathews posits that the sculptor's death was "hastened by grief and disappointment due to the rejection of a plaster bust of President Taft she had made.") Other selections note the all too real role art played in some subjects' deaths, such as 70-year-old photographer August Obermèuller, who met his end in a vat of developer fluid in 1910. Moske also provides a detailed biography of the scrapbook's compiler--enigmatic felon turned assistant curator Arthur Hervilly, who dedicated himself to rescuing these artists from becoming "the prey of death and oblivion," and whose project was continued by colleagues after his 1919 death. Taken as a whole, these obituaries make a surprisingly enjoyable case for celebrating the artistic devotion, creative sacrifices, and strange legacies of artists whose memories have been lost to time, as well as for reconsidering how artists are viewed in the public eye."--Provided by publisher.