Word: feigen
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HAROLD STEVENSON-Feigen-Herbert, 24 East 81st. Eyebrows will go up from Manhattan to Idabel, Okla. (the artist's home town) at his billboard-size The New Adam in the buff. Also on display are 17 other samples of Stevenson's exquisite gigantism, including The Right Eye of Sal Mineo with lashes as long as shoestrings. Through...
Some of the reaction was as farcical as Singelmann's project. Author-Columnist Harry Golden urged Negroes to accept the free rides, enjoy a lark in the North, and he would provide funds to get them back home. Wealthy Chicago Art Dealer Richard L. Feigen, 31, said he had $10,000 he would use to buy white supremacists one-way tickets to South Africa. But one statistic seemed to show just how insignificant Singlemann's scheme really is: in the past ten years, more than 92,000 Negroes have left Louisiana at their own expense and with...
...Feigen admired Maitland's inherited treasures, his host told of one painting that had been stolen when the collection was on view at U.C.L.A. in 1959. The insurance of $1,000 had been paid, and the Maitlands dropped the matter there...
From Maitland's description of the painting, Feigen realized that it might be a first-rate Klee. He decided to see if he could find it. sent a letter to ten top international art magazines telling about the theft and reporting that the Maitlands wanted the painting back. Professor Leopold Reidemeister, general director of West Berlin's municipal museums, learned the sad news by reading Feigen's appeal in London's Burlington Magazine...
Reidemeister had bought the Klee from the notable dealer Gunther Franke of Munich. An old friend of Klee's. Franke had himself bought the painting in good faith from an American who said it had come from a private collection. Last week Franke wired Feigen that the American was a "J. Alex Greene." Two days later...