/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Jerry Robinson, American comic book artist (Batman) and reputed creator of The Joker, died he was 89.

Sherrill David Robinson, known as Jerry Robinson, was an American comic book artist known for his work on DC Comics' Batman line of comics during the 1940s died he was 89.. He is best known as the self-proclaimed creator of the Joker,[2] and for his work on behalf of creators' rights.
He was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2004.


(January 1, 1922 – December 7, 2011)

Early life

Born in Trenton, New Jersey, Robinson graduated from Columbia University.[3][4]

Career

1939–1943

Robinson was a 17-year-old journalism student at Columbia University in 1939 when he was discovered by Batman creator Bob Kane, who hired him to work on that fledgling comic as an inker and letterer.[5] Kane, with writer Bill Finger, had shortly before created the character Batman for National Comics, the future DC Comics. Robinson rented a room from a family in The Bronx near Kane's family's Grand Concourse apartment, where Kane used his bedroom as an art studio. He started as a letterer and a background inker, shortly graduating to inking secondary figures. Within a year, he became Batman's primary inker, with George Roussos inking backgrounds. Batman quickly became a hit character, and Kane rented space for Robinson and Roussos in Times Square's Times Tower.[6]
Approximately a year and a half after Robinson and Finger were hired by Kane, National Comics lured them away, making them company staffers. Robinson recalled working in the bullpen at the company's 480 Lexington Avenue office, alongside Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, as well as Jack Kirby Fred Ray, and Mort Meskin, "one of my best friends, who[m] I brought up from MLJ".[6]
By early 1940, Kane and Finger discussed adding a sidekick. Robinson suggested the name "Robin" after Robin Hood books he had read during boyhood, saying (in a 2005 interview) that he was inspired by one book's N.C. Wyeth illustrations.[6] The new character, orphaned circus performer Dick Grayson, came to live with Bruce Wayne (Batman) as his young ward in Detective Comics #38 (April 1940). Robin would inspire many similar sidekicks throughout the remainder of the Golden Age of Comic Books.
Batman's archnemesis, the Joker, was introduced around the same time, in Batman #1 (Spring 1940). Though Kane claimed he and writer Bill Finger came up with the idea for the Joker, most comic historians credit Robinson for the iconic villain, modeled after Conrad Veidt in the 1928 movie, The Man Who Laughs.[5] Credit for that character's creation, however, is disputed. Robinson has said he created the character.[6] Kane's position was that:
Bill Finger and I created the Joker. Bill was the writer. Jerry Robinson came to me with a playing card of the Joker. That's the way I sum it up. [The Joker] looks like Conrad Veidt — you know, the actor in The Man Who Laughs [the 1928 movie based on the novel] by Victor Hugo... Bill Finger had a book with a photograph of Conrad Veidt and showed it to me and said, 'Here's the Joker.' Jerry Robinson had absolutely nothing to do with it. But he'll always say he created it till he dies. He brought in a playing card, which we used for a couple of issues for him [the Joker] to use as his playing card.[7]

Detective Comics#38 (May 1940), the debut of Robin. Art by Bob Kane and Robinson.
Robinson, whose original Joker playing card was on public display in the exhibition "Masters of American Comics" at the Jewish Museum in New York City, New York, from September 16, 2006 to January 28, 2007, and the William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum in Atlanta, Georgia from October 24, 2004 to August 28, 2005, has countered that:
Bill Finger knew of Conrad Veidt because Bill had been to a lot of the foreign films. Veidt... had this clown makeup with the frozen smile on his face. When Bill saw the first drawing of the Joker, he said, 'That reminds me of Conrad Veidt in The Man Who Laughs.' He said he would bring in some shots of that movie to show me. That's how that came about. I think in Bill's mind, he fleshed out the concept of the character.[8]
Robinson was also a key force in the creation of Bruce Wayne’s butler, Alfred Pennyworth, and the villain Two-Face.[3]
In 1943, when Kane left the Batman comic books to focus on penciling the daily Batman newspaper comic strip, Robinson took over the full penciling, along with others such as Dick Sprang. Only Kane's name appeared on the strip.

1944–2007

From 1944 to 1946, Robinson and his friend Meskin formed a studio which produced material for the short-lived Spark Publications. Robinson worked on numerous other characters for several publishers, at one point doing freelance illustrations for a textbook publisher. After leaving superhero comics, he became a newspaper cartoonist and created True Classroom Flubs and Fluffs, which ran during the 1960s in the New York Sunday News (later incorporated into the Daily News). Robinson would later launch a political satire feature, Still Life, in the early 1970s.[5]
Robinson never saw himself only as a comic-book artist. In the 1950s, he started drawing cover illustrations for Playbill and tried his hand at political sketches, producing what he considered his best work: “I did 32 years of political cartoons, one every day for six days a week. That body of work is the one I’m proudest of. While my time on Batman was important and exciting and notable considering the characters that came out of it, it was really just the start of my life.”[9]

Robert Sikoryak created this portrait of Jerry Robinson for The New Yorker (May 2, 2011).
Robinson was president of the National Cartoonists Society from 1967 to 1969 and served a two-year term as president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists starting in 1973.
During the mid-1970s, Robinson was a crucial supporter of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster in their long struggle with DC Comics to win full recognition and compensation as the creators of Superman. With comics artist and rights advocate Neal Adams, Robinson organized key support around Siegel and Shuster, to whom DC, in December 1975, granted lifetime stipends and a credit in all broadcast and published Superman works.[5][10] In 1978, he founded CartoonArts International, which as of 2010 has more than 550 artists from over 75 countries.[11][12]
During 1999, Robinson created an original manga series, Astra, with the help of manga artist Shojin Tanaka and Ken-ichi Oishi. This was later on released in English through Central Park Media by their manga line CPM Manga as a comic book miniseries and then a trade paperback.
On May 26, 2007, DC Comics announced that Robinson had been hired by the company as a "creative consultant". The press release accompanying this announcement did not describe his duties or responsibilities.[13] Robinson died in his sleep at age 89 on the afternoon of December 7, 2011 in Staten Island.[3][5]

Books

In 1974, Robinson wrote The Comics, a comprehensive study of the history of newspaper comic strips.

Awards

Robinson won the National Cartoonists Society Award for the Comic Book Division in 1956, their 1963 Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for Still Life, their 1965 Special Features Award for Flubs and Fluffs and their Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000. Robinson was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2004. Robinson received the Sparky Award for lifetime achievement from the Cartoon Art Museum at the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con International.


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Anne McCaffrey, American fantasy writer (Dragonriders of Pern series), died from a stroke she was 85.

Anne Inez McCaffrey  was an American-born Irish writer, best known for the Dragonriders of Pern science fiction series died from a  stroke she was 85.. Early in McCaffrey's 46-year career as a writer, she became the first woman to win a Hugo Award for fiction and the first to win a Nebula Award died from a  stroke she was 85.. Her 1978 novel The White Dragon became one of the first science-fiction books to appear on the New York Times Best Seller list.
In 2005 the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America named McCaffrey its 22nd Grand Master, an annual award to living writers of fantasy and science fiction.[3][4] She was inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame on 17 June 2006.[5][6][7]

Life and career

Anne Inez McCaffrey was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the second of three children of Anne Dorothy (née McElroy) and Col. George Herbert McCaffrey. She had two brothers: Hugh ("Mac", died 1988) and Kevin Richard McCaffrey ("Kevie").[8][9] Her father had Irish and English ancestry, and her mother was of Irish descent.[10] She attended Stuart Hall (a girls' boarding school in Staunton, Virginia),[11] and graduated from Montclair High School in New Jersey.[12] In 1947 she graduated cum laude from Radcliffe College with a degree in Slavonic Languages and Literature.[8]
In 1950 she married Horace Wright Johnson (died 2009),[13] who shared her interests in music, opera and ballet.[14] They had three children: Alec Anthony, born 1952; Todd, born 1956 and Georgeanne ("Gigi", Georgeanne Kennedy), born 1959.[8]
Except for a short time in Düsseldorf, the family lived for most of a decade in Wilmington, Delaware. They moved to Sea Cliff, Long Island in 1965, and McCaffrey became a full-time writer.[15]
McCaffrey served a term as secretary-treasurer of the Science Fiction Writers of America from 1968 to 1970. In addition to handcrafting the Nebula Award trophies, her responsibilities included production of two monthly newsletters and their distribution by mail to the membership.[16]
McCaffrey emigrated to Ireland with her two younger children in 1970, weeks after filing for divorce. Ireland had recently exempted resident artists from income taxes, an opportunity that fellow science-fiction author Harry Harrison had promptly taken and helped to promote. McCaffrey's mother soon joined the family in Dublin.[17] The following spring, McCaffrey was guest of honor at her first British science-fiction convention (Eastercon 22, 1971). There she met British reproductive biologist Jack Cohen,[18] who would be a consultant on the science of Pern.[19]

Writer

McCaffrey had had two short stories published during the 1950s. The first ("Freedom of the Race", about women impregnated by aliens) was written in 1952 when she was pregnant with her son Alec. It earned a $100 prize in Science-Fiction Plus.[20] Her second story, "The Lady in the Tower", was published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction by editor Robert P. Mills and purchased again by editor Judith Merril for The Year's Greatest Science Fiction.[a] McCaffrey said "she thought of the story when wishing herself alone, like a lady in an ivory tower".[21]
Judith Merril matched McCaffrey with her long-time literary agent Virginia Kidd (died 2003) and invited her to the Milford Writer's Workshop (to which she returned many times), where participants each brought a story to be critiqued.[22] After her first Milford workshop in 1959 she worked on "The Ship Who Sang", the story which began the Brain & Brawn Ship series. At the story's end, the spaceship Helva sings "Taps" for her human partner. Decades later, McCaffrey's son Todd called it "almost an elegy to her father".[23] In interviews between 1994 and 2004, she considered it her best story and her favorite.[24][25][26][27] "I put much of myself into it: myself and the troubles I had in accepting my father's death [1954] and a troubled marriage."[25]
McCaffrey then wrote two more "Ship" stories and began her first novel. Regarding her motivation for Restoree (1967), her son recalled her saying, "I was so tired of all the weak women screaming in the corner while their boyfriends were beating off the aliens. I wouldn't have been—I'd've been in there swinging with something or kicking them as hard as I could".[28] McCaffrey explained that it did not require a sequel; it "served its purpose of an intelligent, survivor-type woman as the protagonist of an S-F story".[29]
Regarding her 1969 Decision at Doona (which she dedicated "To Todd Johnson—of course!"), her son recalled that he was directed to lower his voice in his fourth-grade school play when his mother was in the auditorium. That inspired the Doona story, which opens on "an overcrowded planet where just talking too loud made you a social outcast".[30] As a settler on Doona, the boy talker has a priceless talent.
McCaffrey made a fast start in Ireland, completing for 1971 publication Dragonquest and two Gothic novels for Dell, The Mark of Merlin and The Ring of Fear.[31][32] With a contract for The White Dragon (which would complete the "original trilogy" with Ballantine), her writing stalled. During the next few years the family moved several times in the Dublin area and struggled to make ends meet, supported largely by child-care payments and meager royalties.[33]
The young-adult book market provided a crucial opportunity. Editor Roger Elwood sought short contributions for anthologies, and McCaffrey started the Pern story of Menolly. She delivered "The Smallest Dragonboy" for $154, and four stories which later became The Crystal Singer.[34] Futura Publications in London signed her to write books about dinosaurs for children.[35] Editor Jean E. Karl at Atheneum Books sought to attract more female readers to science fiction and solicited "a story for young women in a different part of Pern". McCaffrey completed Menolly's story as Dragonsong and contracted for a sequel before its publication in 1976. The tales of Menolly are continued in Dragonsinger: Harper of Pern, and Dragondrums as the "Harper Hall Trilogy". [36] With a contract with Atheneum she was able to buy a home (named "Dragonhold" for the dragons who bought it).[37] Her son wrote, 20 years later, that she "first set dragons free on Pern and then was herself freed by her dragons."[38]

Dragons

Some time after their move to Long Island, Todd McCaffrey recalls, his mother asked him what he thought of dragons. She was brainstorming about their "bad press all these years". The result was a "technologically regressed survival planet" whose people were united against a threat from space (in contrast to an America divided by the Vietnam War). "The dragons became the biologically renewable air force, and their riders 'the few' who, like the RAF pilots in World War Two, fought against incredible odds day in, day out—and won."[39]
The first Pern story, "Weyr Search", was published in 1967 by John W. Campbell in Analog Science Fiction and Fact. It won the 1968 Hugo Award for best novella, voted by participants in the annual World Science Fiction Convention.[3] The second Pern story, "Dragonrider", won the 1969 Nebula Award for best novella, voted annually by the Science Fiction Writers of America.[3] Thus she was the first woman to win a Hugo for fiction[7] and the first to win a Nebula.[citation needed]
"Weyr Search" covers the recruitment of a young woman, Lessa, to establish a telepathic bond with a queen dragon at its hatching, thus becoming a dragonrider and the leader of a Weyr community. "Dragonrider" explores the growth of the queen dragon Ramoth, and the training of Lessa and Ramoth. Editor Campbell requested "to see dragons fighting thread [the menace from space]", and also suggested time travel; McCaffrey incorporated both suggestions. The third story, "Crack Dust, Black Dust", was not separately published, but the first Pern novel (Dragonflight, published by Ballantine Books in 1968) was a fix-up of all three.[40]
If John Campbell was midwife to Dragonflight (with its major components published as award-winning novellas), agent Virginia Kidd and editor Betty Ballantine provided advice and assistance for its sequel Dragonquest. It was almost complete (and the contract for another sequel signed) before the 1970 move to Ireland. Both Ballantine and fellow writer Andre Norton made suggestions for the mutant white dragon.[41]
Readers waited a long time for the completion of the original trilogy. Progress was not made until 1974–1975, when the New England Science Fiction Association invited McCaffrey to its annual convention (Boskone) as guest of honor (which included publication of a novella for sale on-site). She wrote A Time When, which would become the first part of The White Dragon.[b]
The White Dragon was released with new editions of the first two Pern books, with cover art illustrated by Michael Whelan. It was the first science-fiction book by a woman on the New York Times bestseller list, and the cover painting is still in print from Whelan. The artists share credit for their career breakthroughs.[c][d]

Collaborations

McCaffrey said of her collaborations with Todd and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, "While I would dearly love to have the energy to tell a tale all on my own, I really cannot say that I am not ably represented with my collaborations". In the Pern collaboration with Todd, she was mainly "making suggestions or being a sounding board".[13] According to Todd, McCaffrey also gave Todd and his sister Gigi permission to write their own stories set in the Pern universe.[citation needed]

Death

McCaffrey died at age 85 on 21 November 2011 at her home in Ireland, following a stroke.[42]

Books

Classification

In August 1987, Locus: The magazine of the science fiction & fantasy field ranked two of the eight extant Pern novels among the 33 "All-Time Best Fantasy Novels", based on a poll of subscribers; Dragonflight was #9 and The White Dragon #23.[43] Commenting on the Locus list, David Pringle called them "arguably science fiction rather than fantasy proper"[44] and named McCaffrey a "leading practitioner" of the planetary romance subgenre of science fiction.[45][e]
McCaffrey considered most of her work science fiction and enjoyed "cutting them short when they call me a 'fantasy' writer". All the Pern books may be considered science fiction, since the dragons were genetically engineered by the Pern colonists. Regarding science, she said "I don't keep up with developments, but I do find an expert in any field in which I must explain myself and the science involved".[24] Astronomer Steven Beard often helped with science questions,[46] and McCaffrey acknowledged reproductive biologist Jack Cohen several times.[example needed]
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame citation of Anne McCaffrey summarizes her genre as "science fiction, though tinged with the tone and instruments of fantasy", and her reputation as "a writer of romantic, heightened tales of adventure explicitly designed to appeal—and to make good sense to—a predominantly female adolescent audience."[7]
McCaffrey said in 2000, "There are no demographics on my books which indicate the readers are predominately of an age or sex group. Dragons have a universal appeal"![25] Formerly, it was another matter:
I started writing s-f in the late 50's/early 60's, when readership was predominantly male. And their attitudes unreconstructed. [... Women] began reading s-f and fantasy—and, by preference, women writers. My stories had themes and heroines they could, and did, relate to. I never had any trouble with editors and publishers. I had trouble getting male readers to believe I was serious, and a good enough writer to interest them.
In 1999, the American Library Association gave McCaffrey the 11th Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults, citing The Ship Who Sang (1969) and the first six Pern books[47] (those sometimes called the "original trilogy" and the "Harper Hall trilogy").

Restoree

McCaffrey's first novel was Restoree, published by Ballantine Books in 1967. Unlike most science-fiction books of the era, Restoree's heroine is a strong-willed, intelligent woman who is willing and able to think for herself and act on her own initiative. McCaffrey was widely quoted as saying that Restoree was intended as a "jab" at how women were usually portrayed in science fiction.[48]

Federated Sentient Planets universe

Several of McCaffrey's series (and more than half her books) are set in a universe governed by the "Federated Sentient Planets" ("Federation" or "FSP"). Although Pern's history is connected to the Federation, McCaffrey only used it as a backdrop for storytelling and did not consider her different "worlds" to be part of the same universe.

Dragonriders of Pern series

McCaffrey's best-known works are the Dragonriders of Pern series. These are set on a planet known as Pern, settled by colonists from Earth. The advanced technology of their ancestors has been lost, so the inhabitants of Pern have reverted to a society similar to western medieval Earth. However, before the loss of this advanced technology the original colonists produced genetically engineered dragons. These dragons are now flown by elite "dragonriders", who communicate telepathically with them. Together, they defend Pern against pernicious "thread" which cross space periodically from a nearby planet (the "red star") and threaten to destroy all life on Pern.

The Brain & Brawn Ship series

The Brain & Brawn Ship series comprises seven novels, only the first of which (a fix-up of five previously published stories) was written by McCaffrey alone.[49] The stories in this series deal with the adventures of "shell-people" or "Brains", who as infants (due to illness or birth defects) have had to be hard-wired into a life-support system. With sensory input and motor nerves tied into a computer they serve as starship pilots (or colony administrators), seeing and feeling the colony or ship as an extension of their own body. They perform this job to pay off their debt for education and hardware, and continue as free agents once the debt is paid. To compensate for the Brains' inability to move within human habitats they are paired with partners known as "Brawns", who are trained in a wide array of skills (including the protection of their Brain counterparts). It was considered impossible for a person to adjust to being a shell after the age of two or three. An exception, in The Ship Who Searched, was a shell-person who was seven when she became quadriplegic.
The Ship books are set in the same universe as the Crystal Singer books; Brainship-Brawn pairings were also characters in the second and third volumes of that series.

The Crystal universe

The Crystal universe is the setting for five books, including the Crystal Singer trilogy. The first book (and first of the trilogy), The Crystal Singer (1982) is a fix-up of four stories published in 1974–1975.[50]
The Crystal Singer series revolves around the planet Ballybran. Under a permanent biohazard travel restriction, Ballybran is home to one of the FSP's wealthiest (and most reclusive) organizations: the Heptite Guild. Source of crystals vital to a number of industries, the Heptite Guild is known to require absolute, perfect pitch in hearing and voice for all applicants (especially those seeking to mine crystal by song). The second and third books feature brainships which were not main characters in the Brain & Brawn Ship series.

Ireta

The Ireta series (as catalogued by the Internet Speculative Fiction Database) comprises five novels: two "Dinosaur Planets" by McCaffrey in 1978 and 1984 and three "Planet Pirates" co-written during the 1990s.[51]
They share a fictional premise, and some characters and events overlap. "Dinosaur Planets" follow the Exploration and Evaluation Corps team on the planet Ireta, which did not expect to find dinosaurs. In "Planet Pirates", all is not well in the FSP: pirates attack the spacelanes. Survivors on Ireta and the survivors of space pirate attacks join forces.

The Talents universe

"The Talents Universe" (as catalogued by the Internet Speculative Fiction Database) comprises two series: "Talent" and "The Tower and Hive" and share a fictional premise. Eight books (all by McCaffrey alone) are rooted in her second story (1959) and three stories published in 1969.[52]
The Talents universe involves a society built around the Talents of telepathic, telekinetic individuals who become integral to the connectivity of interstellar society.

The Barque Cat series

This series covers the origin of the barque cats in the Tower and Hive series.

Doona

Two civilizations in near-identical circumstances – an overlarge, lethargic population and a tragic history with sentient aliens – end up attempting to colonize the same planet by accident. What the humans do not know is that the people they have misidentified as nomadic natives are more technically advanced than themselves (and under no such illusions regarding the humans). The books are set in the time of "Amalgamated Worlds", but a sentence in chapter ten of Crisis at Doona hints that there is "a desire to form a Federation of Sentient Planets". This sets the books just prior to the FSP universe (which comprises much of McCaffrey's work).

Petaybee universe

The Petaybee universe comprises two trilogies (Powers and The Twins of Petaybee) by McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough.[53]

The Freedom series

The Freedom series (or the "Catteni Sequence") comprises one 1970 short story and four Freedom novels written between 1995 and 2002.[54]

Acorna universe

The "Acorna Universe series" comprises ten novels published between 1997 and 2007: seven sometimes known as Acorna and three sometimes known as Acorna's Children. The first two were written by McCaffrey and Margaret Ball, and the rest by McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough.[55]

Other works

McCaffrey also published two short-story collections, several romances and young-adult fantasies. Her nonfiction work includes two cookbooks and a book about dragons. McCaffrey collaborated closely with musicians Tania Opland and Mike Freeman on two CDs ("The Masterharper of Pern" and "Sunset's Gold"), based on her lyrics and the music described in her Pern novels.


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Arie van Deursen, Dutch historian, died he was 80.

Arie Theodorus van Deursen was a Dutch historian whose focus was the early modern period died he was 80 . He was Professor Emeritus of History at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. He was a specialist in Dutch history of the 16th and 17th century.

(23 June 1931 – 21 November 2011)

Career

Arie van Deursen was born at Groningen. He was a prolific author[1] with a refined style. He has written several books about daily life in the Dutch Golden Age, religious controversies in the 16th and 17th century (Jacobus Arminius versus Franciscus Gomarus) and the political situation of that period; he wrote biographies of William the Silent and Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, a history of the Vrije Universiteit, a history of the Netherlands (1555–1702), a biography of Michiel de Ruyter and several volumes of collected essays.
As an orthodox Christian Van Deursen was heavily involved in polemics about the history of secularization and its consequences.[2] In his Huizinga Lecture Huizinga en de geest der eeuw (Huizinga and the spirit of the age) Van Deursen compared the critical evaluation of the secularization by Isaäc da Costa and Johan Huizinga. Van Deursen died in Oegstgeest on 21 November 2011, aged 80.

Books (Dutch)

  • Professions et métiers interdits: Un aspect de l'histoire de la révocation de l'Édit de Nantes, Groningen: Wolters 1960 (doctoral thesis)
  • Honni soit qui mal y pense? De Republiek tussen de mogendheden (1610–1612), Amsterdam: Noord-Hollandsche Uitgevers Maatschappij 1965
  • Bavianen en slijkgeuzen: Kerk en kerkvolk ten tijde van Maurits en Oldenbarnevelt, Assen: Van Gorcum 1974 (ISBN 9051941854)[3]
  • Mensen van klein vermogen: Het kopergeld van de Gouden Eeuw, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1991 (ISBN 9035110110). Translated in English: Plain lives in the Golden Age. Popular culture, religion and society in seventeenth-century Holland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1991.
    • Volume 1, Het dagelijks brood
    • Volume 2, Volkscultuur
    • Volume 3, Volk en overheid
    • Volume 4, Hel en hemel
  • Een dorp in de polder: Graft in de zeventiende eeuw, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1994
  • Willem van Oranje: een biografisch portret, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1995
  • De Bataafse revolutie (1795–1995), Apeldoorn: Willem de Zwijgerstichting 1995
  • Geleefd geloven: geschiedenis van de protestantse vroomheid in Nederland (coauthor: G.J. Schutte), Assen: Van Gorcum 1996
  • Maurits van Nassau, 1567-1625: de winnaar die faalde, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2000
  • Rust niet voordat gy ze van buiten kunt: de Tien Geboden in de 17e eeuw, Kampen: De Groot Goudriaan 2004
  • De last van veel geluk: De geschiedenis van Nederland 1555-1702, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2004 (ISBN 9035126270)
  • Een hoeksteen in het verzuilde bestel: De Vrije Universiteit 1880-2005, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2005 (ISBN 9035128672)
  • De admiraal: De wereld van Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter, Franeker: Van Wijnen 2007 (ISBN 9789051942828)



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Manuel Carbonell, Cuban-born American sculptor, died he was 93.

Manuel Carbonell was regarded as the last of the Cuban Master Sculptors died he was 93 .. He was part of the generation of Cuban artists, which includes Wifredo Lam and Agustin Cardenas, that studied at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes "San Alejandro", Havana Cuba. Carbonell's inexhaustible vision and his ever changing-style are the product of a brilliant talent and academic background. Ceaselessly searching for the essence of form and the absence of details, he struggled to provide a sense of strength, monumentality and simplicity to his work. At 92 years of age, he had continued to work in his studio.

(October 25, 1918 – November 10, 2011 [1]

Childhood

Carbonell was born on October 25, 1918, in Sancti Spiritus ("Holy Spirit"), Cuba.[1][2] He had two sisters the older, Josephine and the younger Angela. His father alone came from a family of eighteen brothers and sisters. The family history has its roots in early sugar farming, from the early 1800s.
At an early age the family moved to Cienfuegos and Carbonell went to study at Cienfuegos primary school, this proved to be the beginnings of many long lasting friendships, even then he was known and recognized as the person so in admiration of art, and consumed with drawing and carving. Continuing on to his more formative academic years, in Havana he attended Belen,[3] a Jesuit Preparatory Catholic High School where, he excelled in the classes that involved art or history.

Creativity

Carbonell first realized he wanted to be a sculptor when he was eight or nine years old. He was always making little figures with clay. And whenever He found a piece of paper, He would doodle little figures on it. His harshest punishment as a child was when his mother forbade him to draw. Having the understanding that a piece of paper could be torn apart but not a sculpture, held the idea of lasting permanence to the thought of creating. To this day he becomes depressed when he is not involved in the process of creation, he becomes impossible. "Something curious happens to me when I sit down to begin the process of translating the images in my imagination into this third dimension. I see the whole piece finished, actually totally finished, in my minds eye, even before I begin. But, as we all know, imagination can be very treacherous."[2] To describe Carbonell's sculptures they have the force of Rodin, the monumentality of Moore and the simplicity of Mallot, but with a personal style and interpretation.[4]

Education

In 1937, He wanted to learn about art and found out about "San Alejandro",[3] the renowned Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes (National Academy of Fine Arts) in Havana.[1] When he arrived, they asked him what previous training he had. Explaining, he told them he had none. The school wanted him to go through a preliminary process for two years prior to attending, however he managed to prove himself with a clay carving that he had made that following weekend and they accepted him as a student on the spot. Carbonell was eighteen years old and barely beginning at San Alejandro when he fell down some stairs. The injury was very severe; one of his kidneys had literally exploded as a result of the impact. He spent nearly one year paralyzed, unable to move. He couldn't attend classes of course, the despair he felt, lying there, all that time was immeasurable. But little by little he learned to walk again, he just stubbornly refused to give up, finally able to return to San Alejandro. At the Academy Carbonell studied under the guidance of Juan José Sicre, a former student of Antoine Bourdelle, Rodin's favorite disciple.[5] In 1945 Carbonell graduated with the title of Professor of Drawing and Sculpture. Carbonell met and worked alongside some great artist, Fidelio Ponce, Victor Manuel, Amelia Pelaez, Estopinan and many more. Artistic excellence, meant one must measure up to maximum standards or smash it into pieces and start again, that was the norm.

Beginnings as a sculptor

His classical and religious period developed between 1945 and 1959 some of his many important commissions included the stone carvings bas-reliefs of the Twelve Stations of the Cross, along with The Last Rites located at Las Lomas Del Jacan in San Miguel de los Banos. Last Rites,[6] was exhibited at the National Capitol in Havana. He also sculpted a statue of the Virgin Mary for the Association of Catholic University students in Havana.[7] A life size wood carving, crucifixion for the chapel at the Covadonga Sugar mill in Las Villas, Cuba.
Carbonell's work received immediate recognition. Dr. Roberto Lopez-Goldaras, the art critic of Havana's Diario De La Marina, in Havana, said in 1952 about his work, "We foresee for the young and distinguished sculptor Manuel Carbonell a great future; (he) who had been able to conceive a sculpture like eternity, will without a doubt, earn himself a glorious name, which is already an euphoric name, accredited among the literary and artistic names of Cuba."[2]

Carbonell carving out of Capellania stone, typical of Cuba, this resembles granite because of its density.
Carbonell participated in numerous national competitions and was the recipient of many awards. The life-size stone carving Fin de una raza (End of a race)[2] earned him his first international award in 1954, for the III Bienal Hispanoamericana de Arte, in Barcelona, Spain. The piece became part of the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Havana; it appeared on the cover of Reader's Digest magazine in May 1956.[8]

Professional Journey

Havana, in the 1950s was glittery with pomp and wealth, deemed "The sexiest city in the world". The Latin Caribbean Playground for the International jet setters. An establishment such as the Tropicana, where the rhythm and gaiety exuded the nightlife was in vogue and a place that Carbonell was well familiar and able to utilize many of the dancers as his models. Enjoying life in the Miramar Coastal neighborhood of Havana.

Manuel Carbonell (right) with Wifredo Lam.
For the first Commercial television broadcast, Union Radio Television, Carbonell was the host and interviewer for a weekly television program where he interviewed artist as his topic of discussion, to include Wifredo Lam, amongst others. He worked in various aspects of television and production whereby he won an award in set design for the ‘Union De La Cronica Tele-Radial Diaria"[2] in the second festival. By 1954 Carbonell left for Europe traveling and visiting museums and more museums in such countries as Spain, Italy, France. A nomad through the museums of Europe proved to inspire Carbonell as he studied the art of the Impressionist and Abstract artists, which inspired a change in direction to give form a sense of movement.[9]
Included in his various business ventures, he owned an operated his own Interior Design business "Carbonell Studio".[10] Where he designed from French to Modern furniture incorporating his other beloved interest of creating an environment. Ultimately this would provide the perfect opportunity for defecting and leaving his homeland, with the understanding he was granted a visa for a purchasing trip to Miami having an ulterior motive.

Exile to New York City

In 1959, Carbonell fled Cuba where he could no longer live under a totalitarian regime. Leaving behind his wealth, his position and his sculptures, and most importantly his family, he arrived in New York City with only his tremendous talent and $200. He initially took up residency at the YMCA.[10]
Although deeply depressed at first, he proceeded to experiment with newly acquired freedom of expression.[11] His early work in his new country shows a constant search for beauty and perfection. His intrinsic fascination with the human body and the basic shapes of nature, led him to a very personal and distinctive style. He moved away from his classical and religious period,[12] in Cuba in the 1940s and 1950s through the commencement and development of his modern expression of the 1960s, culminating in Madison Avenue, then pinnacle of the art world.
It started almost haphazardly and by chance. As payment to his then public relations manager Ted Materna and Associates he provided one of his sculptures. A very prominent doctor, Paul Henkind,[13] then Chief of the Department of Ophthalmology at Monte Fiore Hospital, NYC noticed the incredible sculpture and stated to the gentleman "I didn't know you owned a Rodin"? He insisted in meeting Carbonell to see his work and showed up unannounced at his studio, that same evening with his wife they purchased three Carbonells of their own and became his first patron.
Shortly after in 1961, Manuel Carbonell introduced himself to Dr Fred Schoneman, the influential and renowned Gallery owner, who was impressed with what he saw of Carbonells work, and invited him to become the gallery's first and only modern sculptor. The gallery exhibited Carbonell's sculptures alongside paintings of Impressionist masters, such as Braque, Chagall, Monet, Dufy, Pissarro, Picasso, Gaugin, Renior and others. He lived and worked in a loft studio, located at what is referred to today as Soho. By 1963, he celebrated the first of his seven bi-annual "One Man Show's" at the renowned Schoneman Gallery, Madison Avenue, in New York City, a collaboration exceeding twelve years.[5]
For his first exhibition at Schonemans, Carbonell departed from clay and plaster forms and worked in hammered metals. During this time, one sensed the influence of Pablo Gargallo. In 1967 he extended his frontier to include another one-man show in San Francisco at the Maxwell Galleries. By 1971 the Sculptor held two exhibits, one again at Schoneman and the other at Bacardi Gallery in Miami. At this time, Carbonell moved from acclaimed hammered metals and patina bronzes to high-polished bronzes.[12] This new work took on a completely different turn, becoming more abstract. Rounded volumes replaced the elongated anatomical shapes, present in Lovers, Madonna of the Moon and Figurative Form. During an exhibition at Galerie Moos, in 1972, in Montreal Canada the artist unveiled new subject matters through high-polish bronze as exemplified by Sea Lion, Sea Horses, Snail and Mermaid. These works are abstract interpretations of Carbonells vivid imaginations, conveying universal beauty characteristic of such images.
Randall Galleries took control and ownership of Schoneman Galleries in 1973 while Carbonell was preparing an exhibit as a tribute to Dance. The Dancer series are of flowing and delicate movements in this period, climaxed with his show in New York "Homage and Ballet" to benefit the City Center in 1974.[14] In this show, his highly polished sculptures, soared and flowed, rose and bent, in an unbroken pattern, of graceful movements and merging rhythms of harmony, as exemplified in "Modern Dancer," "Firebird," "Isadora" and "Rehearsal".

Reuniting with family

Carbonell took in his two nephews, in 1960, Ricardo 15 and Luis 13 to live with him in New Jersey to save them from being inducted into Castro's military army.[15] Soon enough, nine months later his father Manuel and his sisters Angela and Josefina with her 2 year-old daughter, Clara were able to leave Cuba and come to Miami. Anxious to rejoin his family, he moved his studio to Miami in 1974 and went into seclusion and concentrated on important private commissions. The following years in 1977 Carbonell created the "Virgin of Fatima", for the Blue Army Shrine, his first commissioned bronze monument in the United States:[16] a 26-foot high statue weighing 12 tons is permanently placed on top of 150 foot shrine in Washington, New Jersey. This statue is one of the largest works cast in bronze in America during the twentieth century.[17] Another impressive monumental sculpture during this period, a composition 15 feet in height of a horse and rider, balanced in only two points, which was commissioned by Burt Reynolds for the entrance of the Burt Reynolds Jupiter Theater, in Jupiter, Florida.[18]
The Awards formally presented by The South Florida Entertainment Writers Associations (SFEWA), an organization of major media theater critics from Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties, decided to name them in the name sake of Carbonell, as he signified and represented one who devotes his life to art.[19] He additionally designed and cast the first awards which were oval in theme. In November 15, 1976 they became and still are called, The Carbonell Awards.[20]
In 1976, Carbonell held a monographic exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum[21] and Art Center, in Miami, Florida, on view at the opening of their newest gallery, where he introduced more than 20 of his newest works.[22] (Now incorporated into, The Frost Museum). Between the late seventies and mid-eighties, the artist worked on private commissions and ventured creatively in designing jewelry and furniture. At this time he had several one-man shows that were also presented at different galleries during this decade, including Steiner Gallery in Bal Harbor, West Avenue gallery in Palm Beach, Camino Real in Boca Raton, all in Florida and Ann Jacob Gallery, in Marietta, Georgia.

The White House


Internationally known Cuban Sculptor Manuel Carbonell, presenting his bronze eagle, as a symbol of freedom.
In 1976 Carbonell presented, at a formal ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House his "Bicentennial Eagle" as a gift to the United States of America. Durning the bicentennial celebrations the sculpture was on display in the Great Hall of Commerce in Washington D.C. The sculpture is now part of The Gerald R. Ford, Presidential Museum, Gran Rapids, Michigan, which is technically a branch office of The National Archives and Records Administration Collection, that the Federal government oversees.[23]

Beaux Arts Gallery

A new representation begun in 1987 as Beaux Arts Gallery, Miami Florida, became the exclusive world wide representative of Carbonell's work, under the Director, Ricardo Gonzalez III. The years 1987-88 marked a very creative and productive period for Carbonell. Lovers, mothers and children, dancers and the female figure intensified as subject matters in his artistic vision.[24] He redefined forms and contours, while maintaining the anatomical essence of the human figure, bringing female sensuality to a point of abstraction, while displaying a sense of aesthetic basic principles in a simplified form. A continuance of one-man shows and exhibits along with Art fairs nationally and internationally have since to date been part of this relationship.[25]
Having won a competition in 1989 to create a statue of the Cuban Apostle Jose Marti for the San Carlos Institute in Key West, Florida. A subject very close to his heart: the artist struggled with the challenge of translating the human Marti into the idealized and heroic universal figure that Marti philosophically and spiritually represented. Conquering this challenge, in 1990 Carbonell moved to Pietrasanta, (Holy Stone) Italy to carve a 6-foot marble sculpture that portrays Marti with his left arm extended, as if to greet visitors, while the right hand rest on a bundle of wheat surrounded by the Cuban flag. The symbolism conveyed by the statue is that a cause, like one stalk of wheat, may become weak, but becomes strong when its supporters band together.[11]

The Miami River Bridge


This bridge on Brickell Avenue was the first time that the Florida Dept. of Transportation incorporated architecture, art and engineering in a bridge design.
Carbonell again won a competition in 1992[26] and was selected to create one of his most impressive commissioned works of art, the 53-foot bronze monument "The Pillar of History" located at the Brickell Avenue Bridge, Miami Florida.[27] Created in 1992 the monument reflects the history of the settlers of Miami, from the indigenous to its pioneers. The monument consists of a 36-foot high bronze bas-relief column that graphically narrates the lives of the Tequesta Indians, Miami's first inhabitants and features 158 figures. At the top stands a 17-foot bronze sculpture, "Tequesta Family" portraying a Tequesta Indian warrior aiming an arrow to the sky with his wife and child at his side. In the niches at the supporting piers are four 4-foot by 8-foot bronze bas reliefs honoring the quintessential Miami pioneers Henry Flagler, Dana A. Dorsey, William and Mary Brickell, Marjory Stoneman Douglas and Julia Tuttle, depicting them in their historical perpetual settings. Twelve bronze bas-reliefs of Florida fauna are located at the base of the flagpole on the sides of the bridge.[28]

This Historical Landmark serves as a lesson on the history of Miami.
"Little Miracles",[2] Certainly an invaluable opportunity, " I was in love with the project, first because the Tequesta's are a fascinating people, second, because it was such an important monument, with such tremendous dimensions. I am convinced that, previously, long ago, there were many civilizations more advanced than ours, who knew how to enjoy the beauty of the soul. While I was in Pietrasanta, Italy to commence this two-year project, in the middle of it, I suffered a stroke.[29] My left side was paralyzed, and being left-handed I was desperate. I kept asking the medical staff, "listen, when can I once again begin to move my arms, I am a sculptor", the reply "be patient" which I am not. On the one hand, I would tell myself, "look Carbonell, you are no longer a sculptor, you have been a sculptor for more than seventy years, but you are no longer a sculptor now. Your left hand is paralyzed. Nobody can change that. It's absurd but on the other hand, since I couldn't accept that, I would say, "yes, I can, I can change that". The doctors released me from the hospital so I could emotionally feel better and come back in a couple of months to start my physical therapy. Ten days later, I told my assistants to get me my tools and bring them to the house because I wanted to start carving again. Shortly there after, my therapy nurse that came to my house spread the news I was insane. All my friends from the hospital arrived, they couldn't believe that I was already working, ok, maybe not with my left hand, but I was surely working with my right hand. "My life is my work. And my work is my life."

Other monuments to follow

Between 1996 to 1999, Carbonell remained in Pietrasanta working on two commissions for monumental sculptures: "El Centinela Del Rio",[30] a 21-foot bronze sculpture depicting a Tequesta Indian blowing a conch shell carved out of alabaster, located at Tequesta Point in Brickell Key. Serving as a welcoming site to all, at the entrance of the mouth of the river and the city of Miami and very near to the "Miami Circle". The other "The Manatee Fountain",[31] consisting of three Indian children playing with two manatees, located at the walkway between, Two and Three Tequesta Point condominiums on Brickell Key. In addition, sculptures are presented in all three buildings. Swire Properties and Manuel Carbonell have a unique patronage, not only is there "The Swire Art Trust", there is the "Swire Carbonell Scholarship Fund" for the Florida International University Foundation.[32]
His modern monumental works, created in his unique and distinctive personal style, are part of important art collections and public spaces, "Couple in Love" adorns the lobby of the Mandarin Oriental, Miami, "Lovers" is founded at the entrance of the Carbonell Condominium,[33] named in the artist honor, "Torso" formally at Selby's Five Point Park, downtown Sarasota is now at the von Liebig Art Center in Naples, Florida, and "New Generation" in Xujianhui Park, Shanghai, China. The sculpture of " Amantes" now graces the grounds of the Hotel Bristol, Republic of Panama.

Later life

Manuel Carbonell died at Kindred Hospital Coral Gables in Coral Gables, Florida, on November 10, 2011, at the age of 93.[1] He was survived by his two sisters, Josefina Gonzalez and Angela Carbonell; niece, Clara Falcon; and nephews, Ricardo and Luis Gonzalez.[1] His funeral mass was held at the chapel of Belen Jesuit Preparatory School in Miami.[1]


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