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Book review: Edith Halpert and Rachel Feinstein

Two books that tell the lives of two women who cracked the masculine world of art

June 26, 2020 09:15
Rachel Feinstein
2 min read

Edith Halpert, the Downtown Gallery, and the Rise of American Art by Rebecca Shaykin (Yale University Press, £40) and Rachel Feinstein, Dung N Go (Ed), (Rizzoli, £55)

I had not heard of Edith Halpert and her Downtown Gallery before reading Rebecca Shaykin’s book in which she brilliantly tells the story of how a young Jewish woman, who came to New York from Odessa aged five, became a successful dealer of American contemporary and folk art. And it is lavishly illustrated with more than 250 illustrations showing works that she sold and others from her own collection.

Halpert was groundbreaking. She had worked in retail from an early age, had a spell working in Macy’s and, at 25, was on the board of an investment bank and earning a small fortune.

Along the way, she had studied art and married the much older artist Samuel Halpert. When he became ill, she sent him to a Freudian analyst, whose diagnosis suggested that, “her success was emasculating him and causing his ailments,” for which the remedy was for her to quit her job and spend her earnings on taking him to live in France for a year.