Authors: Deborah Solomon
49 | “immediate sympathy”: Thomas Hart Benton, |
“I’m damn grateful”: “Unframed Space,” | |
49 | “scented dudes”: Benton interview, |
49 | “What the hell”: unpublished interview with Paul Cummings, for the Archives of American |
49 | “It is absurd”: quoted in his obituary in |
50 | “were mad . . . prophet”: Benton, |
51 | “I improved my brand”: ibid, p. 249. |
51 | “Benton is beginning to be recognized”: letter from JP to his father, Feb. 3, 1933, |
52 | “give you a quick look”: telephone interview with Reginald Wilson, 1984. |
52 | “hurrying down the corridor”: interview with Will Barnet, 1984. |
52 | “Why couldn’t that nice young man”: interview with Frances Avery, 1984. |
52 | “He couldn’t draw”: interview with Yvonne McKinney, 1984. |
52 | “jittery hands”: interview with Joe Delaney, 1984. |
52 | “seemed . . . minimal order”: Benton, |
53 | “He got things out of proportion”: rough draft of a letter from Thomas Hart Benton |
53 | “A good seventy years more”: letter from JP to LeRoy Pollock, n.d., |
53 | “I have much to learn”: letter from JP to Stella Pollock, n.d., |
53 | Charles tried his hardest: interviews with Charles and Frank Pollock, 1983–84. |
54 | “He was trying to impress”: interview with Marie Leavitt Pollock, 1983. |
54 | “I’ll go get them”: interview with Nathaniel Kaz, 1984. |
55 | “As kids we ate chicken and pork”: Frank Pollock interview. |
55 | Rita sent biscuits and cream: interview with Manuel Tolegian, 1983. |
55 | “a sense of ineptitude”: Benton notes. |
55 | “I had a model there”: unpublished interview with Paul Cummings, July 1973. |
56 | “Pollock volunteered”: interview with Harry Holtzman, Dec. 1983. |
58 | “Run faster”: Tolegian interview. |
58 | “The miners and prostitutes”: letter from JP to Charles and Frank Pollock, n.d., |
59 | “I would have been worried sick”: letter from Stella Pollock to Charles and Frank |
59 | “sure hard work”: letter from Stella Pollock to Frank Pollock, n.d. |
59 | “That’s all I had to say”: Tolegian interview. |
59 | “damned little left”: letter from JP to Charles Pollock, n.d., |
60 | “That lunchroom was crazy”: interview with Philip Pavia, 1984. |
61 | “What do we need those Europeans for?”: Tolegian interview. |
61 | “Pollock was posing”: interview with Whitney Darrow, Jr., 1984. |
61 | “heard Thomas Craven lecture”: |
61 | “All Pollock does”: quoted in Polly Burroughs, |
62 | “And when I say artist”: letter from JP to his father, n.d., |
62 | “What the hell”: Tolegian interview. |
62 | “You wait”: interview with Peter Busa, July 1984. |
63 | “We have a substitute”: |
64 | “So far”: ibid. |
64 | “I like it better”: letter from JP to his mother, March 25,1933, |
64 | “Well Dad by god”: letter from JP to his father, Feb. 3, 1933. |
64 | “I am so sorry”: letter from Stella Pollock to JP and others, n.d., |
65 | “I always feel”: letter from JP to his mother, March 25, 1933. |
66 | lit with blue bulbs: interview with Frances Avery, 1984. |
66 | “Jackson adored my mother”: telephone interview with Jessie Benton Lyman, 1984. |
67 | “Jack must have told him”: Benton notes; see also Benton, |
68 | “My mother talked”: telephone interview with Thomas P. Benton, 1985. |
68 | With the first few sounds: Polly Burroughs, |
68 | “Jack tried to play”: Benton notes. |
69 | “Clean up”: telephone interview with Elizabeth Pollock, 1984. |
70 | “I am inclined to believe”: Benton notes. |
71 | “Overnight the Helen Marot I had known”: |
72 | “I felt so sorry”: letter from Stella Pollock to JP and his brothers, Aug. 30, 1934. |
72 | “34 cents in my pocket”: unpublished interview with Sanford (Sande) McCoy by Kathleen |
73 | “Much as Jackson”: ibid. |
73 | “Jack was a very proud . . . young man”: letter from Rita Benton to Francis V. O’Connor, |
74 | “most beautiful”: ibid. |
74 | “Mrs. T. H. Benton Collection”: |
75 | “an enraged Commie”: Benton, |
75 | “petty opportunist”: |
76 | “take the Marxist slant”: quoted in |
77 | “He was truly a lost soul”: letter from Manuel Tolegian to Thomas Hart Benton, Aug. |
78 | “Bums are the well-to-do”: letter from JP to his father, Feb. 3, 1933, |
78 | “grateful to the WPA”: “Unframed Space,” |
79 | “plumbers’ wages”: quoted in Francis V. O’Connor, |
79 | “Lenin’s head”: ibid., p. 8. |
79 | “poor art for poor people”: quoted in Harold Rosenberg, |
80 | “I paid a severe price”: quoted in Thomas B. Hess, |
80 | dressed in pajamas: telephone interview with Jacob Kainen, 1984. |
81 | Twelve of Pollock’s watercolors were destroyed: these are listed in a WPA document |
81 | Flushing warehouse: see |
82 | “disaffected”: unpublished interview with Carl Holty by William Agee, for the Archives |
83 | “The Project can’t use this work”: unpublished interview with Dorothy C. Miller by |
83 | “There’s no news here”: letter from JP to Charles Pollock, n.d., |
83 | helped out at the Siqueiros workshop: Laurance P. Hurlburt, “The Siqueiros Experimental |
84 | he didn’t vote once: The records of the Board of Elections in New York City indicate |
84 | “He couldn’t draw”: interview with Axel Horn, Nov. 1983. |
84 | “He had no ideas”: interview with Harold Lehman, 1984. |
85 | “private, lonely person”: interview with Reginald Wilson, 1984. |
85 | “Jack had the misfortune”: letter from Sande Pollock to Charles Pollock, Oct. 29, |
86 | “He was really in love”: interview with Arloie McCoy, Nov. 1983. |
86 | “walk me home”: interview with Rebecca Tarwater Hicks, May 1984. |
87 | “It’s almost embarrassing”: ibid. |
87 | “I will do what you wish”: letter from JP to Becky Tarwater, n.d. |
88 | “having a very difficult time”: letter from Sande Pollock to Charles Pollock, July |
89 | “I found I loved”: letter from JP to Becky Tarwater, n.d. |
89 | “out here for a week or so”: postcard from JP to Charles Pollock, n.d., |
90 | “he began escaping”: Benton notes. |
91 | “very gentle young man”: telephone interview with Dr. James Wall, 1984. |
91 | “There was a lot of calming down”: quoted in Jeffrey Potter, |
91 | “strong creative urge”: letter from Dr. Edward Allen to Lee Krasner, Sept. 2, 1963, |