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The Marfield Prize is an award given by the Arts Club of Washington, to nonfiction books about the arts.[1][2]


List of winners

Year awarded Winner Title Publisher Published year
2018 Wendy Lesser You say to brick : the life of Louis Kahn Farrar, Straus and Girou 2017 [3]
2017 Rachel Corbett You Must Change Your Life W. W. Norton 2016 [4][5][6][7]
2016 Michael Riedel Razzle Dazzle: The Battle for Broadway Simon & Schuster 2015 [8][9]
2015 Philip Gefter Wagstaff: Before and After Mapplethorpe Liveright 2014
2014 Sherill Tippins Inside the Dream Palace: The Life and Times of New York’s Legendary Chelsea Hotel Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2013[10]
2013 Anne-Marie O’Connor The Lady in Gold: The Extraordinary Tale of Gustav Klimt’s Masterpiece, Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer Knopf 2012
2012 Yael Tamar Lewin Night’s Dancer: The Life of Janet Collins Wesleyan University Press 2011
2011 R. Tripp Evans Grant Wood: A Life Knopf 2010[11]
2010 Linda Gordon Dorothea Lange: A Life Beyond Limits W. W. Norton & Co. 2009
2009 Michael Sragow Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master Pantheon Books 2008
2008 Brenda Wineapple White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson Knopf 2008
2008 Jenny Uglow Nature’s Engraver: A Life of Thomas Bewick Farrar, Straus & Giroux 2007
2007 Scott Reynolds Nelson Steel Drivin’ Man—John Henry: The Untold Story Oxford University Press 2006

References

  1. ^ Scutari, Mike (4 July 2016). ""Indispensable." Who are the Funders Backing Writing on the Arts?". Inside Philanthropy.
  2. ^ Alenier, Karren LaLonde (February 2014). "The Marfield Prize". Scene4 Magazine.
  3. ^ "Wendy Lesser Receives $10,000 Marfield Prize for Arts Writing". Arts Club of Washington.
  4. ^ Maidman, Daniel (July 17, 2017). "A Conversation with Rachel Corbett". The Huffington Post.
  5. ^ Cascone, Sarah (20 March 2017). "Rachel Corbett Wins $10,000 Marfield Prize for Arts Writing". artnet News.
  6. ^ Sturgeon, Jonathon (September 23, 2016). "Auguste Rodin and Rainer Maria Rilke Had a Strange, Moody Friendship: Rachel Corbett's elegant 'You Must Change Your Life' traces the paths of the sculptor and the poet". Artnet News.
  7. ^ "Rachel Corbett Wins $10,000 Marfield Prize for Arts Writing". Artforum. March 24, 2017.
  8. ^ "Michael Riedel's RAZZLE DAZZLE Wins $10,000 MARFIELD PRIZE National Award for Arts Writing". Broadway World. April 30, 2016.
  9. ^ Lloyd Webber, Imogen (May 2, 2016). "Odds & Ends: Oprah to Star in George C. Wolfe Film, Drama Desk Awards to Add Book Category & More". broadway.com.
  10. ^ Charles, Ron (March 11, 2014). "Terry Teachout among finalists for $10,000 Marfield Prize for arts writing". The Washington Post.
  11. ^ "Award winning biographer Tripp Evans to Read at Baker Books May 4 at 7 p.m." South Coast Today. April 28, 2011.

CJV

  • Sections on CJV & cooperation with authorities - discuss Michman, Moore, and Wasserstein's commentaries.
  • write again to Levitt.

Erich Rosenberg & the CJV

Erich Rosenberg (May 13, 1896–November, 1971) was born in Berlin, Germany; he was the third of six children of Gabriel and Bertha Rosenberg (née Rosenbaum). He received a doctorate from the University of Frankfurt am Main in 1922. His thesis advisor, Franz Oppenheimer, had come to Frankfurt in 1919 for the Chair in Sociology and Theoretical Political Economy. In the 1920s, Rosenberg was a businessman; there is no record that he married or had children. According to Max Born's autobiography, by the early 1930s Rosenberg was of independent means, and was studying science and philosophy "for fun" at the University of Göttingen. Introduced by ... Husserl, he had also befriended Born, who held the Chair in Theoretical Physics, and his wife Hedi. By July, 1933 Rosenberg was living in Amsterdam; this was shortly after the National Socialist Party (Nazi) had taken power in Germany. Rosenberg was advising the Borns and others with Jewish family roots about emigration from Germany. After the Borns' emigration to Scotland in 1933, Max Born dedicated his book Atomic Physics (1935) to Rosenberg. Max Born won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954. Rosenberg and Hedi Born were lifelong friends.

Records of Rosenberg's life in Amsterdam from 1933-1938 haven't been found. At some point Rosenberg's mother Bertha joined him in Amsterdam. In Amsterdam, Rosenberg was a supporter of the Committee for Jewish Refugees. The Amsterdam committee as well as the many committees in the Dutch provinces had been managing the influx of refugees from Germany who crossed the border into the Netherlands. In 1938, Rosenberg became the Head of the Welfare Department for the Committee. This is likely in conjunction with the great increase in the influx of refugees following Kristallnacht (November 9–10, 1938). On that night thousands of buildings and businesses of Jews were looted, vandalized, or burned. Many Jews were beaten, some were killed, and in the aftermath about forty thousand Jewish men were incarcerated for varying periods of time. , in which many Jews in Germany, Austria, and the Sudetenland were.

Harry Schnur  [de] later described Rosenberg's work for the Committee: " ."

In August 1941 Rosenberg left the Netherlands for Spain and Cuba, ultimately landing in the United States in 1943.

  • Query of Social Security Death Index..
  • "Hedi Born Collection (1964-1970)". Jewish History Center. File of materials including correspondence between Hedi Born & Erich Rosenberg, archived by Rosenberg ca. 1964.
  • "Erich (Isaac) Rosenberg". GENI.
  • Cohen, David (1955). Zwervend en dolend: de Joodse vluchtelingen in Nederland in de jaren 1933-1940, met en inleiding over de jaren 1900-1933. Erven F. Bohn. OCLC 800840555. Three pages noted in index.

Bibliography

CJV

  • CJV - Comité voor Joodsche Vluchtelingen (Committee for Jewish Refugees).
  • Born, Max (1978). My Life: Recollections of a Nobel Laureate. Scribner. p. 252. ISBN 9780850661743. OCLC 3844761. I do not remember how the final decision to go away was made. We had clever and reliable advice from a friend, Erich Rosenberg. He had been a successful merchant, but when he had earned sufficient money he gave up his job and came to Goettingen in order to study science and philosophy -- without any practical aim, just for "fun". His brother had married Hedi's friend, Elli Husserl, the daughter of my teacher in philosophy, of whom I have spoken in chapter VI. Thus he came to our house and was a most charming, inspiring addition to our circle. He was a man of practical experience, kindness, and wisdom. During these critical days, he was a great help. Comment on Rosenberg's work with CJV.
  • Born, p. 264. "Then she went to Cologne, to get advice from Erich Rosenberg."
  • Born, p. 267. "on July 2 Hedi traveled to England to find accommodation for us. On the way she stopped at Amsterdam and spent a few days with our friend Erich Rosenberg, who was doing a marvellous job there in helping Jewish people to emigrate; he stayed in Europe as long as possible and went to America only when the occupation of Holland by Hiter's armies was imminent."
  • Halter, Marek (1998). Stories of deliverance: speaking with men and women who rescued Jews from the Holocaust. Open Court Publishing. p. 74. ISBN 9780812693645. OCLC 37239026. Halter interviewed Berthold Beitz. Starting in 1941, Beitz employed many Jews for the company Karpathian Oil; these Jews were otherwise destined for the concentration camps. Beitz is quoted, "I even employed one man as a simple clerk, his name was Erich Rosenberg, Professor of Economics." Beitz was working in the Ukraine - it isn't clear whether this is the same Rosenberg who had been living in the Netherlands.
  • Levitt, Ruth (September 28, 2012). "Committee for Jewish Refugees in Amsterdam". Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide.
  • Michman, Dan (1981). "The Committee for Jewish Refugees in Holland, 1933-1940". Yad Vashem Studies. XIV. Jerusalem: 205–232.
  • Moore, R. (2012). Refugees from Nazi Germany in the Netherlands 1933–1940. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9789400943681. OCLC 12978293.
  • Schnur, Harry C. (1992). "Bombs and Barbed Wire: The Story of My Escape from Amsterdam". In Tournoy, Gilbert; Sacre, Theodore (eds.). Pegasus Devocatus: Studia in Honorem C. Arri Nuri sive Narry C. Schnur. Leuven University Press. pp. 195–196. ISBN 9789061864745. OCLC 906605435. Rosenberg, himself a refugee from Germany, had reorganized the Jewish Refugees Committee in Amsterdam. ... He would work ten hours or more every day, without salary of course, being himself a generous contributor. ... Having taken his mother to the cabin, he makes for the ganway. 'Where are you going?' I ask him. 'I am returning to Amsterdam. I have no family left in Amsterdam, and our refugees need me now more than ever. If the Nazis don't kill me outright, they, too, will need someone to continue the business of the Committee.' ... If our people had a Victoria Cross to give, it could grace no better man than Rosenberg.
  • Van Tijn, Gertrude (January 1969). "Werkdorp Nieuwesluis". Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook. 14: 182–199. doi:10.1093/leobaeck/38.1.293. ...were free to spend the day as they wished, even outside the village. There were organized cultural activities. Thus Dr. Erich Rosenberg (who headed the Welfare Department of the Jewish Refugee Committee in Amsterdam) gave a series of lectures on refugee...
  • Wasserstein, Bernard (2014). The Ambiguity of Virtue: Gertrude van Tijn and the Fate of the Dutch Jews. Harvard University Press. pp. 83–85. ISBN 9780674281387. OCLC 861478330.
  • Notice from Dan Wyman Books: Jewish Refugees Committee [Amsterdam]. REPORT REGARDING THE ACTIVITIES OF THE JEWISH REFUGEES COMMITTEE AND AFFILIATED COMMITTEES: COVERING THE PERIOD JANUARY 1ST TO DECEMBER 31ST 1936. [No more issued?]. [Amsterdam]: The Committee, 1937. Paper Wrappers, Small Folio, 38, 27 leaves (1-sided). 34 cm. Very Interesting [& in English!] report from this center for Jewish refugees from Germany (including Anne Frank & her family). Includes reports sent in from overseas committee members (from Palestine, Columbia, Uruguay, Paraguay, Brazil, Ecuador, & Chile) Primarily in English; Some German & very little Dutch. SUBJECT(S): Refugees, Jewish -- Netherlands. Jews -- Netherlands. OCLC locates 1 solitary copy (Brandeis). Light wear, Very Good Condition. (ID# 15677) $250.00. OCLC=47966819.
  • Jan Lavies poster. Poster Also high resolution and Auction
  • Silent films of the Committee's work with refugees
  • Rosenberg, James N. (October 29, 1940). "cable to Gertrude van Tijn" (PDF). American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC). Cable indicating availability of 40-50 immigration visa for the Dominican Republic.
  • Michman, p. 229. "A committee worker by the name of Dr. Erich Rosenberg, himself a refugee, contributed particularly to the development of the Committee's social activities. See M. Troper to James G. Rosenberg, September 23, 1941, Joint Archive (JDC) in New York, File: Individuals, Rosenberg, Erich I."

JDC

Rosenberg publications

  • Rosenberg, Erich (1934). Das Problem der Wirtschaftlichkeit in der Betriebswirtschaftslehre [The Problem of Profitability in Business Administration Education] (in German). Strecker & Schröder. OCLC 248304530. This thesis is by a different Erich Rosenberg; the Lebenslauf section at its beginning doesn't correspond with the Rosenberg born in Berlin and living in the Netherlands in the 1930s.
  • Rosenberg, Erich (1922). Zum Geldwertproblem [On the Problem of the Value of Money] (Thesis). OCLC 252442187. Possibly Rosenberg's doctoral dissertation. Frankfurt, Wirtsch.- u. sozialwiss. Diss. v. 7. Okt. 1922 [1924]. (Typescript in Berlin?). Thesis advisor was apparently Franz Oppenheimer. This thesis was done during the hyperinflation period in Germany.
  • "Finding Aid for the Wilma Dykeman Stokely Papers, 1966 March 31-1966 April 26". University of Tennessee Special Collections Library. Retrieved 2011-12-03. Has 3 letters exchanged in 1966 between Wilma Dykeman and Rosenberg.
  • Webster, Ronald (January 1993). "American Relief and Jews in Germany, 1945–1960: Diverging Perspectives". Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook. 38: 293–321. doi:10.1093/leobaeck/38.1.293. ..devastating 1958 report made by Dr. Erich Rosenberg at a Joint executive committee meeting...report of 14th June 1954. 2o Dr. Erich Rosenberg's report to the Joint Executive Committee...Germany on behalf of the survivors, Dr. Erich Rosenberg made some impassioned statements on..

List of Monuments to Friedrich Schiller

Schiller Monuments
Goethe–Schiller Monument (Syracuse)Goethe–Schiller Monument (Milwaukee)Goethe–Schiller Monument#The US monumentsGoethe–Schiller Monument#The US monumentsGoethe–Schiller Monument

Schiller Monument (Omaha)

IMAGE of POSTCARD.
A monument to Friedrich Schiller was erected in Omaha, Nebraska in 1905. It was sponsored by the Omaha Schwaben Society and other German-American organizations, and was designed by Johannes Maihoefer.[1]

The monument was originally sited in Riverview Park. The monument suffered damage in 1917 from anti-German vandals during World War I, and was restored afterwards.[1] Around 1964, when Riverview Park's zoo was expanded to create the Henry Doorly Zoo, the monument was moved to the grounds of the Omaha German-American Society.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Federal Writers' Project; Boye, Alan (2005). Nebraska: a guide to the Cornhusker State. University of Nebraska Press. p. 252. ISBN 9780803269187. RIVERVIEW PARK, ... A MONUMENT TO SCHILLER, designed by Johannes Maihoefer, shows the poet holding a book in his left hand and a pen in the right. The figure, about four feet tall, is mounted on a granite pedestal of four and one half feet, which, in turn, stands on a wide base formed in three low steps. On the front of the pedestal is a bronze lyre within a laurel wreath. The monument stands on a crest in the park, commanding a view of the area. In 1917, stimulated by World War propaganda, vandals attempted to destroy the monument because it was in honor of a German. After the war, the stone was restored. The Omaha Schwaben Society and other citizens of German birth or descent erected the monument in 1905. This book is a reprinting of the 1939 original.
  2. ^ "Schiller monument and Linden tree, Riverview Park, Omaha, Neb". Nebraska Library Commission. Retrieved 2011-09-15.