Theresa Bernstein


Theresa Ferber Bernstein-Meyerowitz was a Polish-born American artist, painter, and writer.

Career

Theresa Ferber Bernstein was born in Kraków, the only child of Jewish parents, Isidore and Anne Bernstein, who emigrated to the United States. According to an original certificate issued by the Board of Public Education of the First School District of Pennsylvania, Bernstein graduated from the William D. Kelley Elementary School in June 1907.
She studied with Harriet Sartain, Elliott Daingerfield, Henry B. Snell, Daniel Garber and others at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women now Moore College of Art & Design. Bernstein was part of the Philadelphia Ten, an influential group of female artists.
She graduated in 1911 with an award for general achievement. After enrolling at the Art Students League in New York City, where she took life and portraiture classes with William Merritt Chase, she traveled for a second time to Europe with her mother, her first trip abroad having been made in 1905. She admired Robert Henri's style of depicting the city's everyday drama.
In 1912 she settled in Manhattan. In 1913, she attended the famous Armory Show. Her studio near Bryant Park and Times Square allowed her to paint a cross-section of New Yorkers; she also painted harbors, beaches, fish, and still-life. She and her husband William Meyerowitz lived for many decades in a rent-controlled loft-style studio apartment at 54 West 74th Street on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, just one block from Central Park West, and this studio was her home at the time of her death. After Bernstein and Meyerowitz married, in 1930 the Baltimore Museum of Art held an individual exhibition for both artists to honor their work and give them publicity to build their individual careers.
Bernstein was a member of the National Association of Women Artists and the North Shore Art Association. Her works were exhibited extensively with the National Academy of Design and the Society of Independent Artists. Her work includes the oil-on-canvas mural titled The First Orchestra in America in the Manheim, Pennsylvania post office, commissioned by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts, and completed in 1938. In the male-dominated art world of her time, Bernstein often signed her works using just her surname. Her self-portrait is part of the Jewish Museum collection. Two of her paintings, The Readers of 1914 and Polish Church: Easter Morning of 1916, were donated to the National Gallery of Art in 2018.

Husband and family

Her husband William Meyerowitz was also an artist. Following the death of their only child in infancy, the couple remained childless during their marriage. Bernstein and Meyerowitz were quite close to two of their nieces who were both musicians, Laura Nyro and Barbara Meyerowitz. Nyro and DeAngelis were supported in their musical educations by Bernstein and Meyerowitz. DeAngelis graduated from The Juilliard School of Music in the 1940s and enjoyed success as a songwriter, composer and teacher of piano and voice in New York and New Jersey. DeAngelis lived and taught piano and voice in Atlanta, Georgia, from March 2010 until her death from a stroke in 2011. Following the death of her husband, Bernstein developed a strong relationship with DeAngelis' youngest son, Keith Carlson, who detailed the extent of their relationship on created by the City University of New York.

Death

Bernstein died on February 13, 2002 at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan at the age of 111, 17 days before her 112th birthday and several years after suffering a stroke. According to an original certificate issued by the Board of Public Education of the First School District of Pennsylvania, Bernstein graduated from the William D. Kelley Elementary School in June 1907.