Rosalie Ritz

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Rosalie Ritz
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Rosalie Ritz

Rosalie Ritz (born Rosalie Jane Mislove August 6, 1923 in Racine, Wisconsin) is an award-winning journalist and courtroom artist who covered major United States trials in the 1960s through the 1990s. She worked for both CBS and Associated Press, and was presented with the Associated Press Award for Excellence in 1972.

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[edit] Bio

The seventh of ten children, Ritz showed artistic talent at an early age. She attended the Layton School of Art, married World War II navy veteran and athlete, Erwin Ritz in 1946 and is the mother four children, including musician/author Janet Ritz.

[edit] Early career

After her marriage, Ritz lived with her husband in Washington DC. There, she worked with a group of artists in Georgetown. During this time, several of Ritz's selected works (oil paintings) won places in national juried shows at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Smithsonian, and received an honorable mention at the Flower Gallery.

It was during these years in Washington DC, that Ritz first covered US Senate and US Congressional hearings, including the McCarthy Hearings, where cameras were barred. Ritz worked under contract for the Washington Post, CBS, Public TV, and The Associated Press. Selected drawings appeared in the Washington Post from these hearings.

[edit] Courtroom Art

In 1966, during the height of the Haight Ashbury counter-culture era, Ritz moved with her family to the San Francisco Bay Area. Ritz's sketches of the street scenes were published in the City Magazine and the San Francisco Examiner. Her work in Washington DC brought her to the attention of the local public television station KQED. From there, she began a career covering trails for the local CBS outlet, (KPIX) and for the Associated Press. This included the Patty Hearst trial, the Sirhan Sirhan trial, the Charles Manson trial, the trials of the Black Panthers (Huey Newton, Angela Davis), the Soledad Seven trial, Daniel Ellsberg, among many others.

While covering these trials, Ritz worked alongside several renowned journalists, including legendary New York Daily News reporter, Theo Wilson, Associated Press senior trial reporter and special correspondent, Linda Deutsch, and Associated Press chief United Nations correspondent, Edie Lederer.

Ritz continued to cover trials through the early 1980s. Then, in the 1990s, the Associated Press brought Ritz out of retirement to cover the O.J. Simpson civil trial.

[edit] Shows and Exhibitions

Early in Ritz's career, selected works (oil paintings) went on display at national juried shows at Corcoran Gallery of Art and at the Smithsonian.

During her years as a Courtroom Artist, Ritz's sketches appeared in numerous publications, including the Washington Post and various Associated Press affiliates. Ritz's sketches were also used on CBS news broadcasts and other media outlets.

In 2005, the UC Berkeley Art Museum held an exposition of Ritz's sketches.

Later that year, the California Senate followed up with an exposition of Ritz's selected works.

[edit] External links