Russell Cheney
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Russell Cheney (1881-1945) was an American painter. He graduated from Yale, where he was a member of the Skull and Bones secret society.
Cheney studied painting at the Art Students League of New York and was its acting president in 1909-10. He held his first New York exhibition in Babcock Galleries 1922. His portrait of Professor Candle hung in the Paris Salon in 1909 and his work has been represented in many museums including the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the San Francisco Museum of Art. Cheney illustrated F. O. Matthiessen's book Sarah Orne Jewett (1929), on the writer of the same name. A catalogue of Cheney's paintings was published in 1922. Cheney was a member of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, and San Francisco Art Society.
He was the long time partner and lover of author F. O. Matthiessen, who was also a Yale graduate and became a member of Skull & Bones in 1923. Matthiessen was twenty years Russell's junior.
Russell's death was due to mesenteric thrombosis. He was buried in East Cemetery in Manchester, Connecticut. He was survived by two sisters, Ednah Cheney Underhill of Santa Barbara, Calif and Mrs. Halstead Dorey of Boerne, Texas. He had three brothers Knight Dexter Cheney, Philip Cheney, and Thomas Langdon Cheney, who were also members of Skull & Bones.
[edit] References
- Susan Howe (1993). The Birth-Mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0819562637.
- John D'Emilio (1998). Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226142671.
- Jeffrey Escoffier (1998). American Homo: Community and Perversity. University of California Press. ISBN 0520206339.