Details
- Dimensions
- 14ʺW × 1ʺD × 16ʺH
- Frame Type
- Framed
- Period
- 1970s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
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- Materials
- Oil Paint
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Brown
- Condition Notes
- Very good vintage condition Very good vintage condition less
- Description
-
Original oil on canvas initialed lower left presented in a quality contemporary gallery frame. Canvas Size 8 x 10 inches …
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Original oil on canvas initialed lower left presented in a quality contemporary gallery frame. Canvas Size 8 x 10 inches overall size 14' x 16".
Catherine Winslow Euster Priest (1933 - 2022), loved painting, drawing
September 7, 2022
Catherine Winslow Euster Priest, a regular summer visitor to Rehoboth Beach Delaware since 1933, and permanent resident of Rehoboth Beach for the past 30 years, died Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022, at 89 years old, three months shy of her 90th birthday. She is survived by daughters Caren and Bryn, eight grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.
Catherine, known locally and in the family as “Kitsy,” was born in Washington, D.C., Dec. 30, 1932, to Francis Winslow and Laura Bryn, daughter of an Ambassador to the U.S. from Norway. Kitsy’s paternal, Winslow side of the family are descendants of The Mayflower.
As a child, Kitsy showed artistic talent and joined her mother as a regular participant at Rehoboth Art League, where she remained an active member all her life. Painting and drawing were her lifelong passions.
Graduating from Sidwell class of 1950, she entered Connecticut College in New London because of its strength in teaching art. After two years, she married fellow Washingtonian Roger Euster in September 1952, and transferred to Bryn Mawr while her husband completed nearby Haverford. In July 1953, her first child, Caren, was born. From 1954 through about 1958, she and Roger lived mostly in Washington, engaged in real estate; in 1955 their second child, Wayne, was born.
In about 1958 the family moved to New York City, where Roger expanded his business ventures to include not only city real estate but international transactions. In 1962 daughter Bryn was born, followed by Kitsy’s last child, Benjamin Worthington, called Worth. Roger began to buy theaters, including, in 1967, The Village Theatre, which later would become the famous Fillmore East. Roger Euster pioneered the presentation of rock & roll bands such as The Doors, The Who, and Richie Havens, and events by the poet Allen Ginsberg and LSD advocate Timothy Leary. As Roger moved his properties through various corporations, Kitsy was for about six weeks the name owner of The Village Theatre, during which Kitsy presented Ginsburg and Leary in anti-Vietnam War events.
Kitsy and Roger’s marriage broke up in about 1972. Kitsy then spent about a year on her own, in an apartment in Greenwich Village, wearing “hippie” skirts, and joining the Art Students League, where she studied under traditionalist painter Frank Mason. Her drawings and pastels from this time show real talent, capturing the look and feel of the late 60s and early 70s. Kitsy also took up the Japanese martial art Aikido, and stayed in touch with the sensei (master) for the rest of her life. less
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