Henry Heydenryk Jr.

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Henry Heydenryk Jr.
Born1905
DiedJune 23, 1994
Mystic, Connecticut
NationalityDutch
Known forFrame maker, historian, author and designer
Scientific career
FieldsPicture framing
InstitutionsThe House of Heydenryk (Heijdenrijk)

Henry Heydenryk Jr. (1905–1994) was a Dutch American frame maker, historian, writer and designer. He was the fourth generation descendant of a family-run business, The House of Heydenryk (Heijdenrijk).

Baron Thyssen-Bornemisza and members of the Rothschild family.[3]

The House of Heydenryk

In 1936, Henry Heydenryk Jr. brought the firm to New York City in the United States where he would revolutionize the framing industry by creating new designs and finishes.[4] He supplied both hand crafted frames and antiques to major artists, collectors and museums in the US and Europe. He would also author two books on the art and history of picture framing, The Art and History of Frames: An Inquiry into the Enhancement of Paintings in 1963 and The Right Frame: A Consideration of the Right and Wrong Methods of Framing Pictures in 1964.

In the beginning, the American House of Heydenryk was a franchise of the Dutch firm, making period reproductions for artists, galleries and museums. Heydenryk Jr. would eventually branch out from traditional frame making and design his own mouldings and finishes for contemporary artists in Manhattan under the name The House of Heydenryk Jr. Inc.

Frame Designs for Important 20th- Century American and European Artists

Henry Heydenryk Jr. is credited with introducing and popularizing the wormy chestnut frame in 1938, using wood from trees destroyed by blight and applying new finishes, painted, scraped and stained, as an alternative to traditional gilt and smooth surfaces.[5] In 1937, Heydenryk befriended the

American Modernist painter Marsden Hartley after his dealer Alfred Stieglitz closed his gallery. He designed and loaned frames for Hartley's first exhibition with the Hudson Walker gallery in 1938. The show was an immediate success and Hartley would continue to use Heydenryk’s designs for all of his exhibits until his death in 1943.[6]

In addition to Hartley, The House of Heydenryk Jr. worked directly with and made frames for other American Modernist artists including Georgia O'Keeffe, John Marin, Max Weber, Charles Sheeler, Jacob Lawrence, Stuart Davis, Romare Bearden, Milton Avery, Yasuo Kuniyoshi and Abraham Walkowitz.[7]

Heydenryk also produced and sold frames directly to such American painters as

John Sloan, Norman Rockwell, Raphael Soyer, Moses Soyer and John Carlton Atherton. He framed the early exhibitions of such Abstract Expressionists as Robert Motherwell, Adolph Gottlieb and William Baziotes
.

Heydenryk’s influence was not limited to American artists. He framed works by Pablo Picasso for the New York galleries of European art dealers Paul Rosenberg, Klaus Perls and Pierre Matisse as well as Picasso’s American art dealer/agent, Samuel Kootz. In 1947, the first post war exhibition of Picasso’s work in the US was presented in Heydenryk frames.

Henry Heydenryk Jr. had a long relationship with the Spanish Surrealist Salvador Dalí from the 1940s through the 1960s.[8] In collaboration with Dalí and the Argentine jeweler Carlos Alemany, Heydenryk created frames for a traveling exhibition of Dalí- designed jewels sponsored by the Owen Cheatham Foundation.[9]

Other painters who framed directly with Heydenryk include

Moise Kisling, David Burliuk, Reuven Rubin, Philip Evergood and Joseph Solman as well as the portrait photographers Yousuf Karsh and Richard Avedon
.

Museum and Interior Design Work

The House of Heydenryk supplied both new and period frames to nearly every major US museum including the

.

Henry Heydenryk Jr. worked with

The National Gallery of Art
, providing frames for works dating from the early Renaissance to the 20th century.

In the field of architecture and interior design, Heydenryk designed frames for McKim, Mead & White, William Pahlmann, Samuel Marx, Albert Hadley and Sister Parish, working with their firm Parish Hadley on the Kennedy White House project. Such legendary Hollywood icons of style as Marlene Dietrich, Greta Garbo, Ginger Rogers and Lauren Bacall all came to Heydenryk for his advice on framing. Katharine Hepburn was a special client and Heydenryk named a frame after her in honor of their long friendship.[10]

Books

In 1963, Heydenryk wrote The Art and History of Frames: An Inquiry into the Enhancement of Paintings,

The Today Show
.

Death

On June 23, 1994, Henry Heydenryk Jr. died at The Mary Elizabeth Nursing Home in Mystic, Connecticut. The New York Times paid tribute to his many accomplishments and called him "the concertmaster of his trade."

Starrett-Lehigh Building in Chelsea, New York City.[14]

References

  1. ^ The original Dutch spelling of the firm is Heijdenrijk. The New York branch uses the American version, which is spelled Heydenryk.
  2. .
  3. ^ From Interview with F.A. van Kempen, 2003
  4. .
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ Rabel, Richard (12 March 2012). "The Frames of Heydenryk". The Modern Sybarite. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  8. ^ Brooks, John (27 April 1963). "An Enhancing Adjunct". The New Yorker. New York: Conde Nast: 50–72. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  9. LCCN 76151633
    .
  10. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (25 June 1994), "Henry Heydenryk Jr., 89, Expert On the Framing of Art, Is Dead", The New York Times, retrieved 9 October 2012
  11. LCCN 63012084
    .
  12. .
  13. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (25 June 1994), "Henry Heydenryk Jr., 89, Expert On the Framing of Art, Is Dead", The New York Times, retrieved 9 October 2012
  14. ^ Thanks to: F.A. van Kempen, Margit Rigmor Heydenryk, Boyce Benge, and William Adair

External links