[[Centerport, New York]]"},"coordinates":{"wt":"{{coord|40|53|16|N|73|22|21|W|display=inline,title}}"},"locmapin":{"wt":""},"built":{"wt":"1938"},"architect":{"wt":""},"architecture":{"wt":"Late Victorian"},"added":{"wt":"January 28, 2000"},"area":{"wt":"less than one acre"},"refnum":{"wt":"99001682{{NRISref|2009a}}"}},"i":0}}]}" id="mwxQ">United States historic place
Arthur Dove-Helen Torr Cottage | |
Location | 30 Centershore Rd., Centerport, New York |
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Coordinates | 40°53′16″N73°22′21″W / 40.88778°N 73.37250°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1938 |
Architectural style | Late Victorian |
NRHP reference No. | 99001682 [17] |
Added to NRHP | January 28, 2000 |
In July 1924, when Arthur Dove and Helen Torr sailed into Huntington Harbor aboard their 42-foot yawl, Mona, they could not have anticipated the extent to which Long Island's North Shore would inspire some of their greatest paintings. They lived in Halesite until the Great Depression when both Dove and Torr moved back to Dove's estate located in Geneva.
Wishing to return to Long Island, in 1938 the couple moved back into their first home, a former post office and general store on Center Shore Road in Centerport, New York. They purchased the house for $980.00. The tiny, one-room cottage stood on the edge of the Titus Mill Pond. Almost immediately, Dove was found to have pneumonia; he eventually suffered from a heart attack and was diagnosed with a debilitating kidney disorder. In terrible health for the remainder of his days, he lived quietly, finally able to devote himself entirely to painting, and focus on the inspiration of his surroundings and his home. Some of the most powerful paintings of his career, including Indian Summer, were painted in Centerport. Torr remained[ clarification needed ] in the house on the millpond but never painted again. Helen Torr died in 1967. In 1979, her works and Dove's were hung together in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. [11] [18]
The Arthur Dove-Helen Torr Cottage was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. [17]
Dove suffered from heart disease and Bright's disease through the late 1930s. [1] He suffered a heart attack in 1939 and his health never fully recovered. In 1946 Dove had his last show with nine new paintings and made his final visit to the gallery and saw Stieglitz for the last time. In July of that year their first grandchild Toni was born. A little more than a month after the show closed in July, Stieglitz died of heart failure. Badly shaken from his friend's death, Dove lived for only four more months. [6] Although he became partially paralyzed by a stroke, he continued with Torr's help guiding the brush, painting until he collapsed and died at Huntington Hospital. [6] Arthur Dove died on November 23, 1946, following a second heart attack and kidney failure. He was interred at the Memorial Cemetery of St. John's Church in Cold Spring Harbor, New York. [19] In October, just before his death, Dove wrote to Phillips for the last time:
You have no idea what sending on those checks to me at this time. After fighting for an idea all your life I realize that your backing has saved it for me and meant to thank you with all my heart and soul for what you have done. It has been marvelous. So many letters have been written and not mailed and owing to having been in bed a great deal of time this summer, the paintings were about all I could muster up enough energy to do what I considered the best of my ability. Just before Stieglitz’s death I took some paintings to him that I considered as having something new in the. He immediately walked right up to them and spoke of the new ideas. His intuition in that way was remarkable and I am so glad to have been allowed to live during his and your lifetimes. It has been a great privilege for which I am truly thankful.
Arthur Dove's granddaughter is the interactive artist Toni Dove. [20]
The Estate of Arthur Dove is represented by the Terry Dintenfass Gallery. [21]
In 2017, it was announced that Geneva, New York, would receive economic revitalization funding that would, in part, assist with rehabilitating the 1878 Dove Block building, once Dove's studio in the 1930s. [22] The Landmark Society of Western New York had previously announced that the historic Dove Block building was on its "Five to Revive for 2016." [23]
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an unbridled love of pure, hot color that also recalls Gauguin and the Fauves.