Title:
Annette Rosenshine papers, 1885-1998 (bulk 1907-1971)
Creator/Contributor:
Rosenshine, Annette, 1880-1971, creator
Creator/Contributor:
Toklas, Alice B., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Miller, Henry, 1891-1980, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Matisse, Henri, 1869-1954, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Brancusi, Constantin, 1876-1957, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Adamic, Louis, 1899-1951, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Fromm, Erich, 1900-1980, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Ginsberg, Allen, 1926-1997, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Kuh, Katharine., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Mitford, Jessica, 1917-1996, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Mumford, Lewis, 1895-1990, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Padgette, Paul.
Creator/Contributor:
Sprigge, Elizabeth, 1900-1974, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Padgette, Paul., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Arnstein, Flora J., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Rambo, Chris., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Statsinger, Evelyn., Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Stein, Leo, 1872-1947, Correspondent
Creator/Contributor:
Stein, Michael., Correspondent
Abstract:
Contains correspondence, writings, clippings, reviews, and related material regarding Rosenshine's art and interest in psychoanalysis.
Significant correspondents include Flora Arnstein, Constantin Brancusi, Erich Fromm, Allen Ginsberg, Henri Matisse, Henry
Miller, Lewis Mumford, Paul Padgette (her literary executor), Chris Rambo, Evelyn Statsinger, Leo Stein and Nina Stein, Michael
Stein, and Alice B. Toklas. Also includes letters from Louis Adamic, Mortimer and Betty Adler, Henry Geldzahler, Katharine
Kuh, Jessica Mitford, and Elizabeth Sprigge.
Also contains various drafts and a final typescript of Rosenshine's unpublished autobiography, "Life's not a paragraph," as
well as notebooks, journals from her psychoanalysis, essays, and poems. Reviews and articles, announcements, copyrights, and
related materials, including a scrapbook of clippings and programs document Rosenshine's work as a sculptor. Also includes
a small amount of personal material, including biographical sketches, obituaries, and papers relating to her estate; her brother,
Albert Adolph Rosenshine; and miscellaneous clippings collected by Rosenshine and Padgette.
Date:
1907 (issued)
Subject:
Art and artists
Women artists
Women sculptors
Femmes artistes
Sculptrices
Women artists
Women sculptors
Stein, Gertrude -- 1874-1946
Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav) -- 1875-1961
Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav) -- 1875-1961
Stein, Gertrude -- 1874-1946
Note:
The Bancroft Library owns the copyright to Annette Rosenshine's writings.
Most photographic material, including an album containing photographs and snapshots of Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas and
the Stein atelier, and clippings re Henri Matisse, has been transferred to the Pictorial Collections of The Bancroft Library.
Sound recording has been transferred to the Microforms Division of The Bancroft Library.
Another copy of the typescript of unpublished autobiography, "Life's not a paragraph" is available on microfilm (FILM 68/154
c). The copy on film includes some variant annotations in first few pages.
Born in San Francisco, Calif., Rosenshine became known as a sculptor and was involved with the artistic circle of Gertrude
Stein, to whom she introduced Alice B. Toklas. Following the 1906 earthquake and fire, Rosenshine traveled to Paris with Michael
and Sarah Stein. She studied art in Paris, was a student in Matisse's first art class, and returned to San Francisco in 1908.
In 1918, she underwent psychoanalysis in Baltimore, then traveled to Zurich in 1920 to study under Carl Jung, during which
time she began creating psychoanalytic sculptures. In 1925, Rosenshine moved to N.Y. to pursue her artistic career, and settled
in Berkeley, Calif. in 1951.
Type:
Photographs.
Scrapbooks.
Autobiographies.
Physical Description:
print
5 boxes, 1 oversize volume, 1 oversize box (2.4 linear feet)
Language:
English
Identifier:
BANC MSS C-H 161LOCAL
Origin:
California
Copyright Note:
The Bancroft Library owns the copyright to Annette Rosenshine's writings.