Name/Title
Helena Simkhovitch | Bronze Head | c.1950sDescription
A bronze cast sculpture head of a woman's head by artist Helena Simkhovitch. The sculpture dates to the 1950s. The sculpture was a gift from the artist's son. It is part of a collection of nine works of sculpture by Simkhovitch in the collections of the Tides Institute. Simkhovitch was born in New York City in 1903, attended Bryn Mawr College and lived from 1925 to 1937 in Paris where she studied art and sculpture with Charles Despiau, Aristide Maillol and at the Academie Colarossi with Marcel Gimond. From 1940 on she lived and worked in New York City and Maine. Her works have been exhibited in Paris, the American Federation of Arts, Whitney Museum of American Art, the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors, the Sculptors Guild, Newark Museum, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Maine and St. Stephen, New Brunswick. In 1955, the Museum of Modern Art organized a traveling exhibition devoted to modern portraits, in which Helena Simkhovitch was the only American. Her awards include the Palmes Academiques and Officer de l’Instruction Publique. Her roots in this region go back to her childhood when she would come to Perry with her parents and grandparents in the summer. Later, she and her husband summered at the Mansion House in Robbinston with her parents, Mary and Vladimir Simkhovitch, from New York City. From the 1960s onwards, she and her husband lived year round in Maine, first at the Mansion House, then in Machias. She died in 1993.
Helena Simkhovitch (1903-1993). Bronze sculpture of Woman's Head. 11" x 6 1/2". Gift by Paul Didisheim, son of the artist, in 2014 in memory of Helena Simkhovitch.