The Chelsea Hotel community was saddened by the recent passing of long-time resident Alfred Russell. A part of the early abstract expressionist movement, Russell exhibited along side such well known painters as Willem De Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko in Paris and New York in the fifties.   Becoming disillusioned with abstraction, he then turned to figurative painting, looking to the classical world for inspiration.  He taught art at Brooklyn College from 1946 until his retirement in 1976.
Russell’s first wife, painter Andress Descharnes, died in 1976.  Russell is survived by his daughter Elsie.  His second wife, Joan Silverstein, an author and classical scholar, still lives at the Chelsea.  (Source: http://www.parnasse.com/alfred.htm)  Photo of Alfred at the Chelsea by Claudio Edinger.

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4 responses to “Alfred Russell 1920 – 2007: Painter Who Repudiated Abstraction”

  1. Cowboy Avatar
    Cowboy

    Damn, this is the first I’m hearing of this. What a great guy. Rest in Peace, Al.

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  2. zonedout Avatar
    zonedout

    Cowboy,
    If the Bards were still around I think we all would have known sooner. They always put a notice by the front desk when a current or former long-term resident died.

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  3. Peter Feld Avatar

    Hi — Joan goes by Joan Russell but her maiden name is Silverman, not Silverstein. Rest in peace, Alfred.

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  4. Beth M. Pacheco Avatar
    Beth M. Pacheco

    Alfred Russell’s widow is Joan Silverman Russell, author and classical scholar. She is a retired City University professor.

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