68

Mildred "Millie" Rittenberg Wohl

American/Louisiana, 1906-1977

Mildred "Millie" Rittenberg Wohl
(American/Louisiana, 1906-1977)

"Untitled"

oil on canvas
signed en verso.
Period frame.
44" x 44", framed 44-3/4" x 44-3/4"

Notes: The daughters of Jewish Polish immigrants, Rebecca and Joseph Rittenberg, both Mildred "Millie" Wohl and Ida Kohlmeyer, would pursue careers as painters. The Rittenberg family settled in New Orleans, owned a pawn shop, and moved to Rosa Park Boulevard in Uptown where they raised two sons and two daughters. Ida was the youngest, and tragically, both brothers died as young men. The sisters, Millie and Ida enrolled at Tulane University's H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, which at that time was only available for women.
After graduating, Millie had her first solo exhibition at the Sky Club in 1959, which was followed by a show at Naomi Marshall's Downtown Gallery in 1961. Ida had her first exhibition at the New Orleans Museum of Art in 1957, and exhibited in New York City at the Ruth White Gallery in 1959, where she maintained a long-term relationship.
Both sisters embraced abstract expressionism and actively participated in the Orleans Gallery located in the French Quarter. Founded in 1956 by a group of artists, the Orleans Gallery was non-profit, community oriented, and supported and promoted contemporary local artists. The sisters adopted their own distinct visual vocabulary where Ida's paintings were grounded in fields of white, while Millie embraced darker black tonalities.

oil on canvas
signed en verso.
Period frame.
44" x 44", framed 44-3/4" x 44-3/4"

  • Notes: The daughters of Jewish Polish immigrants, Rebecca and Joseph Rittenberg, both Mildred "Millie" Wohl and Ida Kohlmeyer, would pursue careers as painters. The Rittenberg family settled in New Orleans, owned a pawn shop, and moved to Rosa Park Boulevard in Uptown where they raised two sons and two daughters. Ida was the youngest, and tragically, both brothers died as young men. The sisters, Millie and Ida enrolled at Tulane University's H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, which at that time was only available for women.
    After graduating, Millie had her first solo exhibition at the Sky Club in 1959, which was followed by a show at Naomi Marshall's Downtown Gallery in 1961. Ida had her first exhibition at the New Orleans Museum of Art in 1957, and exhibited in New York City at the Ruth White Gallery in 1959, where she maintained a long-term relationship.
    Both sisters embraced abstract expressionism and actively participated in the Orleans Gallery located in the French Quarter. Founded in 1956 by a group of artists, the Orleans Gallery was non-profit, community oriented, and supported and promoted contemporary local artists. The sisters adopted their own distinct visual vocabulary where Ida's paintings were grounded in fields of white, while Millie embraced darker black tonalities.

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