Wood, Beatrice
Biography
Beatrice Wood (1893-1998) was born on March 3, 1893 in San Francisco and raised in New York City. The daughter of affluent socialites, Wood studied painting at the Julian Academy and acting at the Comédie Francaise in Paris at the age of 18. Upon her return to New York, she joined the French Repertory Company and in 1916, befriended the artist Marcel Duchamp and the writer and diplomat Henri Pierre Roché. The three founded and published the short-lived little magazine The Blind Man, one of the earliest manifestations of Dada in Americirca Through Duchamp, Wood met the art collectors Walter and Louise Arensberg, artists Man Ray, Francis Picabia, and Charles Sheeler, and the poet Mina Loy. Wood became a regular participant in the frequent gatherings of intellectuals, artists, and writers at the Arensbergs' West 67th Street apartment. With Duchamp's encouragement, Wood returned to drawing and painting, submitting a work to the 1917 exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists.
Wood relocated to Montreal in 1919 to continue her acting career and there she married Paul Renson, a theater manager. She soon annulled the marriage and returned to New York City. Around 1926, Wood moved to Los Angeles and then to Hollywood, California, where she renewed her friendship with the Arensbergs. In 1938, she married Steve Hoag, an engineer. By all accounts the marriage was not a happy one, yet the couple lived together until his death in 1960. In 1948, they relocated to Ojai, California to be near the Indian sage Krishnamurti, the leader of the Theosophical Society, to which Wood had belonged since 1923.
Wood first became interested in ceramics in 1933 after purchasing a set of luster-glaze plates at an antique store. She soon enrolled in a pottery course in the Adult Education Department of Hollywood High School. She later studied briefly with the Austrian ceramists Gertrud and Otto Natzler. For the next sixty years, Wood supported herself creating and selling pottery and in 1956 she opened her own studio. At first, she concentrated on dinner sets, but by the mid-1970s she began to specialize in more elaborate, decorative bowls, vases and chalices with complex luster glazes. Wood continued to work at her potter's wheel until two years before her death in 1998 at the age of 105.
Found in 191 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence from Beatrice Wood to Walter Arensberg, 1953 September 27
Correspondence from Beatrice Wood to Walter Arensberg. Includes letter from Marcel Duchamp.
Correspondence from Charles Sheeler to Walter and Louise Arensberg, 1933 June 27
Correspondence from Charles Sheeler to Walter and Louise Arensberg.
Correspondence from Danielle Rice to Jack Sawyer, 1987 May 28
Correspondence from Danielle Rice, Curator of Education at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Jack Sawyer, 19th and 20th Century Art Department at the Saint Louis Art Museum.
Correspondence from Dorothy Jacobson to Jane Adlin, 1972 September 1
Correspondence from Dorothy Jacobson, 20th Century Art Department at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Jane Adlin, Department of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Beatrice Wood, 1954 May 21
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Beatrice Wood.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Beatrice Wood, 1954 February 2
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Beatrice Wood.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Eliel and Loeb, 1952 October 15
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Eliel and Loeb.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Marcel Duchamp, 1954 February 18
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Marcel Duchamp.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Walter Arensberg, 1952 October 14
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Walter Arensberg.
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball to Walter Arensberg, 1951 October 26
Correspondence from Fiske Kimball, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to Walter Arensberg.
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