Finding Aid to the Eva Scott Fenyes Collection
MS.206
Kim Walters, Anna Liza Posas
Library and Archives at the Autry
2013
210 South Victory Blvd.
Burbank, CA 91502
rroom@theautry.org
Contributing Institution:
Library and Archives at the Autry
Title: Eva Scott Fenyes Collection
Creator:
Picher, Annie Belle
Creator:
Fenyes, Eva Scott
Identifier/Call Number:
MS.206
Physical Description:
1.5 Linear Feet
(3 boxes)
Date (inclusive): 1904-1951
Abstract: Eva Scott Fenyes (1849-1930) was an artist who spent more than thirty years traveling from San Diego to Sonoma, California
to preserve the history and aesthetic beauty of her surroundings through her artwork. She moved to Pasadena, California circa
1896 where assisted with the founding of the Pasadena Emergency League in 1910 and the Pasadena Music and Art Association
in 1912. She was also an active member of the Landmarks Club of California and the Southwest Society. This collection consists
of Eva Scott Fenyes correspondence as well newspaper articles she collected. The material spans from 1904-1928.
Language of Material:
English
.
Conditions Governing Access
Processing History
Inventory and initial processing by library staff. Biographical note taken from exhibit curated and written by Autry Curator,
Kim Walters, 2011. Finding aid completed by Anna Liza Posas, 2013. Final processing of collection and publication of finding
aid made possible by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC).
Biographical Note
Eva Scott Fenyes (1849-1930)
Eva was born on November 9, 1849 and was the daughter of Leonard Scott, New York publisher, and Rebecca Briggs Scott. Eva
was educated at Pelham Priory in Pelham Manor, New York, and then studied art in New York, Europe, and Egypt. In 1877, she
also spent time in Fort Marion, Florida, where she asked Henry Pratt to have the artists Howling Wolf (Cheyenne) and Zo Tom
(Kiowa) create ledger books for her. This early affiliation with Native American artists and her support for their work continued
throughout her life.
In 1878, Eva married Lieutenant William S. Muse, who later became a brigadier general. Their only child, Leonora, was born
in 1879. After spending several years as an army wife, Eva began to spend time traveling, painting, and living in Santa Fe,
New Mexico. In 1891, she divorced Muse and traveled extensively in Europe, Egypt, and other Middle Eastern countries. During
these travels she met Dr. Adelbert Fenyes, who was a Hungarian nobleman, a doctor of nervous diseases, and an entomologist.
They were married in Budapest in 1896 and settled soon thereafter in Pasadena, where Mrs. Fenyes continued to paint.
Although Mrs. Fenyes painted constantly, she did not exhibit her work or consider herself a "professional artist." She painted
a variety of subjects and was also interested in music, archaeology, philanthropy, and history. She assisted with the founding
of the Pasadena Emergency League in 1910 and the Pasadena Music and Art Association in 1912. She was an active member of the
Landmarks Club of California and the Southwest Society. She also later served on the board of trustees of the Southwest Museum.
Her daughter, Leonora Curtin, and her granddaughter, Leonora Curtin Paloheimo, continued to serve on the board through the
late 1980s.
Eva was instrumental in the creation of art and literary salons that brought together a wide variety of local artists, writers,
and other intellectuals who met in her home in Pasadena. Among the participants in these salons were such well-known California
painters as William Keith and Benjamin Brown, who described her as "too accomplished in many phases of art to become proficient
in one."
By the 1890s, Eva was friends with Charles Lummis. In a 1904 letter, Mrs. Fenyes asked Lummis his opinion about documenting
the historic adobes, which she had started in 1898. Lummis responsed in a letter, "It seems to me it would be a very valuable
thing if you could carry out your plan to make accurate watercolor studies of the old buildings in this region. Accuracy is
the first requirement; and such a series would have serious historical value. I hope you may be able to realize this plan—
and I am inclined to think that if you can undertake it in just the right way, you will find it better for your health than
all the doctors. . . ." They continued their friendly contact throughout their lives.
Eva spent more than thirty years traveling from San Diego to Sonoma to preserve the history and aesthetic beauty of her surroundings.
She died on February 3, 1930.
Source: "Capturing California's Romantic Past: The Watercolor Works of Eva Scott Fenyes," Autry National Center online exhibit,
2011. Curated by Kim Walters, Ahmanson Curator of Native Culture at the Autry.
Related Materials
Watercolors of Eva Scott Fenyes, Braun Research Library Collections; Autry Museum of the American West.
Curtin Family Collection, 1922-1981, Braun Research Library Collection, Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles; MS.648.
Fenyes-Curtin-Paloheimo Papers, 1745–1970, Pasadena Historical Museum.
Scope and Contents
This collection consists of Eva Scott Fenyes correspondence as well newspaper articles she collected. The material spans from
1904-1928. Except for one folder of loose newspaper articles, most of the articles have been assembled by Fenyes into a multivolume
set of scrapbooks.
The news articles relate to Los Angeles history and society, early California families, California missions and adobes, and
Native American arts and culture. Clippings also relate to the Southwest Museum, the building of the Casa de Adobe, and Charles
Lummis.
This collection also includes one portfolio of correspondence with letters from Hector Alliot, J.P. Gaylord, J.M. Guinn, Theo
Hittell, Frederick Webb Hodge, George P. Ide, L.H. Ingersoll, and Charles Fletcher Lummis written from 1904-1916.
One folder consists of material added by the Southwest Museum staff after 1934 and are not original items from the personal
collections of Eva Scott Fenyes. This folder includes listings, booklets, documents, and clippings from 1901-1951 and primarily
is about the Fenyes paintings held at the Southwest Museum.
Preferred Citation
Eva Scott Fenyes Collection, 1904-1951, Braun Research Library Collection, Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles;
MS.206
.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright has not been assigned to the Autry Museum of the American West. All requests for permission to publish or quote
from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Research Services and Archives. Permission for publication is
given on behalf of the Autry Museum of the American West as the custodian of the physical items and is not intended to include
or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the reader.
Custodial History
This collection primarily consists of correspondence belonging to Eva Scott Fenyes and scrapbooks assembled by Fenyes. The
Eva Scott Fenyes Collection was given as a gift from the daughter of Fenyes, Mrs. Leonora (Thomas) E. Curtain, April 3, 1934.
There is one folder that consists of material added by the Southwest Museum staff after 1934 that are not originally from
the personal collections of Eva Scott Fenyes.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Indian art
Indian arts
Missions -- California
Articles
Adobe houses -- California
Women artists
Warner's Ranch (Calif.)
Historic buildings -- California
Watercolors
Casa de Adobe (Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, Calif.)
Legends del Camino Real: San Gabriel Mission Bells
Los Angeles (Calif.) -- History
California -- History
Correspondence
Pasadena (Calif.) -- History
Scrapbooks
Santa Barbara Mission
Clippings
Ide, George P.
Gaylord, J. P.
Ingersoll, L. H.
Guinn, J. M. (James Miller)
Hodge, Frederick Webb
Hittell, Theodore Henry
Alliot, Hector
Lummis, Charles Fletcher
Southwest Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.)
box 1, folder 1
Annie Belle Picher letter to Eva Fenyes
1913 October 18
box 1, folder 2
Correspondence
1904-1916
Scope and contents
Correspondence is pasted in folio and includes letters from Hector, Alliot, J.P. Gaylord, J.M. Guinn, Theo Hittell, Frederick
Webb Hodge, George P. Ide, L.H. Ingersoll, and Charles Fletcher Lummis.
box 1, folder 3
Image of priest at the Mission Santa Barbara, California
undated
box 1, folder 4
Index to Fenyes scrapbooks
circa 1928
Scope and contents
This index was created by Fenyes and pertains to scrapbooks S1-S5 in this collection.
box 1, folder 5
List of autographed letters purchased from Robert Cowen
undated
Scope and contents
This is a handwritten document by Fenyes and consists of a list of autographed letters purchased from bookseller Robert Cowen.
Fenyes also notes that the letters go with William Heath Davis's book
Sixty Years in California, published in 1889.
box 1, folder 6
Newspaper clippings on California
early 20th Century
Scrapbooks
1904-1928
Scope and contents
This group includes seven bound scrapbooks of newspaper clippings related to Los Angeles history and society, early California
families, California missions and adobes, and Native American arts and culture. Clippings also relate to the Southwest Museum,
the building of the Casa de Adobe, and Charles Lummis.
Correspondence from the Southwest Museum, Los Angeles Public Library, and others are interfiled in scrapbooks as well. Scrapbook
S4, page 30, includes a letter from Lummis and images he sent her of the Southwest Museum groundbreaking. Images are dated
1913 December 6.
box 2, folder S3
Scrapbook, volume 3, part 1
box 2, folder S4
Scrapbook, volume 3, part 2
box 1, folder 7
Material about Fenyes collection
1901-1951
Scope and contents
This folder consists of material added by the Southwest Museum staff after 1934 and are not original items from the personal
collections of Eva Scott Fenyes. The folder includes listings, booklets, documents, and clippings about the Fenyes paintings
held at the Southwest Museum.
The folder also includes copies of newspaper clippings on Dr. Adalbert Fenyes and a 1901 image clipped from the
Los Angeles Times of the Fenyes Pasadena home before constructions.