Lynne Mapp Drexler
Lynne Drexler
Karel Appel
Seymour Boardman
Norman Carton
Jacob Semiatin
Alexander Calder
Carl Holty
Jacques Lowe
Laura Marquez
Malcolm Myers
Jacques Nestle
June Groff
John Kenneth Alexander
Helen Gerardia
Paul Keene
J. Kenneth Fine Art
Taro Yamamoto (artist)
Paul F. Keene Jr.
JKFA
J. Kenneth Fine Art & Estate Collection
Art Gallery
Fine Art
Museum
abstract expressionism
art sales
J. K E N N E T H F I N E A R T
Lynne Mapp Drexler
Alexander Calder
Malcolm Myers
Werner Drewes
Reginald Pollack
William Manning
Victor Vasarely
BIOGRAPHY
Frances Kornbluth was born in New York City on July 26, 1920. As a child, Kornbluth developed a passion for the piano, and graduated from Brooklyn College in 1940 with a degree in music. During World War II, she married. While her husband was overseas, she worked in Washington DC for the Lend Lease Organization and then the Office of Strategic Services. After the war, Kornbluth and her husband moved to Merrick, NY where they had two children.
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In 1947, Kornbluth enrolled in an art workshop on Long Island and began painting figures and still lives in the studio. In 1955, she enrolled in the Brooklyn Museum School, where she studied for four years with William Kienbusch and Reuben Tam. During this time, Kornbluth painted in and out of the studio, including the Freeport marshes and Jones Beach. Her work became increasingly abstract. It was Tam who encouraged Kornbluth to exhibit her work at the Brooklyn Museum and the City Center Gallery, in addition to introducing her to Maine’s Monhegan Island in 1957. She would later credit Tam with: “defining me as the artist I had never envisioned becoming.” Kornbluth also studied with Robert Richenburg at the Pratt Institute, where she received a master’s degree in 1962. In 1969, Kornbluth and her family moved from Merrick, NY to North Grosvenordale, CT, where she would maintain a winter studio for the rest of her life.
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For 57 years, Kornbluth spent her summers on Monhegan Island, renting in different locations until 1974 when she purchased a cottage in Lobster Cove and established a permanent summer studio. In 1985, Kornbluth was an artist in residence at Altos de Chavon, an artists' village in La Romana, Dominican Republic.
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On May 26, 2014, Kornbluth died in Dayville, CT at the age of 93. During her lifetime, she was a member of the National Association of Women Artists, a charter member of the National Museum of Women in the Arts and a founding member of Women Artists of Monhegan Island.
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MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
Binghamton University Art Museum, Binghamton, NY
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA
Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, ME
Monhegan Museum of Art, Monhegan, ME
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