Title:
Thérèse Jelenko papers and photographs, 1899-1960
Creator/Contributor:
Jelenko, Thérèse, 1884-1967, creator
Creator/Contributor:
Ehrman, Theresa, 1884-1967
Creator/Contributor:
Judah L. Magnes Museum, 2009.8.
Creator/Contributor:
Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life
Abstract:
The collection includes correspondence from Theresa Ehrman (later Thérèse Jelenko) to her mother (Jennie) and sister (Sally)
sent during Theresa's stay in Paris with the Steins in the first decade of the 20th century. The collection also includes
correspondence and postcards from Pablo Casals to Theresa Ehrman from the 1900s through the 1960s and correspondence with
other friends and acquaintances. Especially notable in the collection are the photographs of the Stein family, family friends,
and the family residences and studios in Paris circa 1909-1910. These photographs include images of Sarah, Michael, Allan,
Gertrude, and Leo Stein as well as images of the interiors of their Parisian apartments (with their art collections on the
walls). The photographs also include images of Henri Matisse, Pablo Casals and others.
Date:
1899 (issued)
Subject:
Jelenko, Thérèse -- 1884-1967 -- Archives
Stein, Sarah -- 1870-1953
Matisse, Henri -- 1869-1954
Stein, Michael -- 1865-1938
Stein, Gertrude -- 1874-1946
Casals, Pablo -- 1876-1973
Stein family
Ehrmann family
Jews -- California -- San Francisco
Photographs
Paris (France)
Note:
Formerly: Judah L. Magnes Museum Collection Number 2009.8.
COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE: Advance notice required for use.
Thérèse Jelenko papers and photographs, BANC MSS 2010/603, The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, The Bancroft Library,
University of California, Berkeley.
Related collection: Thérèse Jelenko reminiscences (BANC MSS 67/148 z).
Related collection: Elise Stern Haas correspondence, [ca. 1951-1966] (BANC MSS 71/222 c).
Thérèse Jelenko was born Theresa Ehrman in 1884. The daughter of Jennie Rosenthal Ehrman and Herman Ehrman, Thérèse grew up
in San Francisco, where she nurtured her talent as a pianist. Thérèse's parents were friends with Michael and Sarah Stein
(brother and sister-in-law of Gertrude Stein) and Thérèse taught piano to the Steins' son, Allan. When the Steins moved to
Europe in 1903, they took Thérèse with them. She lived with the Stein family at 1 rue de Fleurus (down the street from Leo
and Gertrude Stein, who lived at 27 rue de Fleurus). Sarah and Michael became important early collectors of modernist art.
The Stein home in Paris was filled with paintings by artists like Matisse and Picasso that would rest firmly in the modernist
canon in decades to come. Gertrude, for her part, built a career as one of the great modernist writers. In the midst of all
this excitement, Thérèse established connections with Pablo Casals, Henri Matisse and others who travelled in the same circles
as the Steins. Thérèse actually accompanied Casals on the piano at times and they remained in touch until the 1960s. Thérèse
stayed in Europe through the First World War, studying music with Blanche Selva. She returned to the United States after the
war, though she continued to travel back to Paris throughout her life. Thérèse's three husbands were Sigmund Bauer (b. 1870),
Max Schukl (b. 1869), and Victor Jalenko. She had no children.
Type:
Correspondence.
Photographs.
Physical Description:
2 boxes (.8 linear feet)
Language:
English
Origin:
California
Copyright Note:
COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE: Advance notice required for use.