Misplaced Pages

Alzira Peirce

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Margerypark (talk | contribs) at 19:21, 30 October 2014 (As apparent from previous controversies Rms125a@hotmal.com appears to be a compulsive Misplaced Pages vandal.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 19:21, 30 October 2014 by Margerypark (talk | contribs) (As apparent from previous controversies Rms125a@hotmal.com appears to be a compulsive Misplaced Pages vandal.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Alzira Peirce was an artist, mother, political activist, World War Two veteran, and radio announcer.

Born on January 31, 1908 in New York City; Rachael Fisk, Becky Bahr, and Dwight Boehm were her siblings. They were all born in New York but moved to Circle, Montana to live as homesteaders after their father, August Abraham Boehm, a sculptor, died in Algiers in 1912 shortly after having arrived there from London. Their mother, Hazel Hunter Handforth (1883-c.1957), daughter of Benjamin Franklin Handforth and Allie Belle Hunter, was a suffragette, a homesteader once she moved to Montana, and a restaurateur in New York's Greenwich Village in the 1920s.

August Boehm, born in Vienna in 1880, had graduated from Columbia University in 1901 but was affected by the panic of 1907 in which his father, Abraham Boehm (1841-1912), a pioneering German-born Jewish New York City real estate developer, lost most of his fortune. (Established in 1882, the firm of Boehm & Coon had commissioned one of New York's first skyscrapers, the 11-storey Diamond Exchange Building (1893–94), as well as The Langham, a prestigious Manhattan apartment building. The elder Boehm had also partnered the inventor Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim in introducing gas engines to Europe).

Alzira's childhood was marked by the aftermath of panic of 1907 and the loss of both her paternal grandfather and her father when she was only four. Growing up in Montana, Alzira played the harmonica, drew, and rode horses. When she was 13 she moved back to New York and sought employment through one of her paternal uncles, an architect. In New York she studied at the Art Students League and later traveled to Paris to study. She painted, sculpted, and drew many works of art. Her poetry was published in The New Yorker magazine.

Excerpted from Peter H. Falk et al (ed), Who Was Who in American Art 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison, Ct: Sound View Press, 1999)

Painted as Alzira Peirce.

Painter. Lithographer,Mural Painter,Teacher, Sculptor

Studied: Art Students League of New York with Boardman Robinson; Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris with the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle, a close associate of Auguste Rodin.

Member: National Society of Mural Painters; Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors.

Exhibited: Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; Carnegie Institute. College of Fine Arts; Art Institute of Chicago; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts; Pan-Am Exhibition; Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors Work: United States Post Offices, Ellsworth, South Portland, both in Maine; Indian Mountain School, Lakeville Connecticut. Works Progress Administration artist.

She taught art to sailors on leave at the International Seamen's Union. One of her students was the cartoonist Gahan Wilson. She joined the Army during World War Two, working for the Red Cross and doing publicity for the Army for nearly two years.

After leaving the Army she was divorced from the artist Waldo Peirce, 24 years her senior (she had become Peirce's third wife in 1930, the same year in which she gave birth to their twin sons in Paris). She then became active in party politics, as well as a union organizer, unusual for a woman at this time. Two of her children, Anna Peirce and Michael Peirce, went to boarding schools but her son Mellen Chamberlain (Bill) Peirce (who later married the radical British solicitor Gareth Peirce) lived with her during some of this period.

Alzira Peirce moved to New Mexico and worked as an organizer for the United Mine Workers union. She later married Chuck Albaugh, son of John Albaugh and Nora Stanley. They were separated after four years and Alzira Albaugh moved to Boston with her daughter Kathleen Swoboda, formerly Kathleen Albaugh.

Alzira Albaugh died, aged 102, on 19 June 2010.