Terry Dintenfass

Terry Dintenfass

Terry (right) with Jacob & Gwendolyn Lawrence circa 1970
Born Theresa Schellenberg Kline
April 4, 1920
Atlantic City, NJ
Died October 26, 2004
New York, NY
Nationality American
Movement American Modernism
Social Realism

Terry Dintenfass (1920 - 2004) was an American art dealer.[1]

Terry Dintenfass established her first gallery, the D Contemporary, in 1954[2] in the lobby of the Traymore Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey where she sold the work of Milton Avery, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ben Shahn, John Marin, Max Weber, amongst others. She showed work on consignment from prominent New York dealers, and became especially close to Edith Halpert, whose Downtown Gallery represented the estate of Arthur Dove. In 1959, Dintenfass moved to Manhattan and opened the Terry Dintenfass Gallery.[1] Terry Dintenfass was part of a wave of women dealers, along with Halpert, Grace Borgenicht, Betty Parsons, Antoinette Kraushaar, Joan Washburn and others, who worked the New York art market between the 1940s to the 1980s.

Terry took a keen interest in social and political issues. She showed the works of African American artists including Jacob Lawrence, whom she would represent for 25 years, Raymond Saunders, and Horace Pippin. Dintenfass notably represented African-American artists in a time when Manhattan Galleries displayed little African-American Art. The "Social Realist" painters Philip Evergood and Robert Gwathmey helped shaped the gallery with a strong social consciousness.[2] Once settled in New York, Dintenfass became the protégé of Edith Halpert.[3] When Halpert retired in the early 1960s, the Arthur Dove estate joined Terry Dintenfass, Inc. which then had a stable of William King, Gwathmey, Evergood, Sidney Goodman, Hyman Bloom, Antonio Frasconi, among others, and later the sculptor Elisabeth Frink.

The gallery represented these artists for much of the last three to four decades and is now involved in their secondary market. The gallery continues to represent the estate of Arthur Dove.[4] After maintaining a gallery in Manhattan for nearly 40 years, Dintenfass retired in 1999 and died in 2004. Her business is currently run by her son Andrew and his wife Ann.[1]

References

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