To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.
Sponsored by Nancy Boas.
Gene Meier
March 30, 2021
Bill enjoyed my project, Panorama for a Small City: Histories of a Mass Medium
Doug Nelson
November 19, 2020
Bill & Abbie were generous in donating a set of the Winslow Homer Catalogue Raisonne while I was a Trustee at Museum of the White Mountains. We had great conversations about White Mountain Art History and they donated a Samuel Lancaster Gerry still life to MWM in 2018. I am disappointed that we never made time to accept their invitation to their home in NYC.
What a wonderful example of a life well lived!
Nancy Boas
May 14, 2020
We have lost a great man in Bill Gerdts. He was my admired friend for more than forty years. His prodigious intelligence and vast knowledge of American art enriched us all. His generosity as a teacher and mentor and his remarkable output of pubications in the field have left an enduring legacy.
Lee Rosenbaum
April 30, 2020
I published this tribute to Bill on my CultureGrrl blog: https://www.artsjournal.com/culturegrrl/2020/04/covid-obit-william-gerdts-91-distinguished-scholar-of-american-art-my-tipster.html
Dr. William L. Coleman
April 24, 2020
My heartfelt condolences to Abigail and all Bill's family and friends. Allow me to add a tribute from one who had the good fortune of working with a significant component of Bill's legacy: the astonishing collection of 19th-century American paintings he built for the Newark Museum of Art in his formative years there from 1954-66.
When I took the Newark job, Bill invited me for a lunch and visit to his collection I won't soon forget, during which he regaled a young curator following in his footsteps with tales of battles with legendary Newark director Katherine Coffey over acquisitions, secret ploys for getting the best price for pictures, and the ones that got away (Cole's Voyage of Life foremost in his mind, its sentimentality a bridge too far for the tastes of the time.) The collection he inherited was already strong in 19th-century American paintings thanks to the substantial gifts of Newark physician Jonathan Ackerman Coles in the 1920s, but it was a collection with many gaps. In a period when few others valued such things, he set about a landmark campaign of acquisitions that made the collection one of the best in the world. One became accustomed to finding a '54-'66 accession number on the best things in the galleries: Thomas Cole's 'The Arch of Nero', Worthington Whittredge's 'The Wetterhorn', Mary Nimmo Moran's 'Newark from the Meadows', Frederic Church's 'Twilight, "Short Arbiter 'Twixt Day and Night"', and William Harnett's 'Munich Still Life' are just a few favorites that he brought into that collection, whether through purchase, cajolement, or some combination of the two. Searching through the filed correspondence from his era revealed a generous, thorough, thoughtful scholar at the outset of a brilliant career, building relationships and piecing together evidence, guided always by a real love for oil on canvas.
Dr. Christine Isabelle Oaklander
April 23, 2020
Dr. Gerdts was a towering figure in the history of American art. No one published as much as he did nor, I suspect lectured as much either. Visiting his and Abigail's Park Avenue apartment to use his research files and library was a privilege. The Gerdts's art collection was remarkable and included examples by dozens of artists, some fascinating and obscure, other famous and stunning. Viewing and discussing the collection with both Abbie and Bill was fabulous. A close colleague of my Ph.D. advisor, William Innes Homer, the two Bills, along with Barbara Novak, Barbara Weinberg, and one or two other scholars, were the pioneers in our field. I always admired Dr. Gerdts for his generous mentoring of his graduate students and vast network with museums, dealers, and auction houses. Typically art professors are not conversant with the market but Dr. Gerdts had worked in the market himself and had a great eye. His presence will be greatly missed and now is the time for the next generation of scholars and art experts to pick up the American art standard and carry it forward with vision, energy, and generosity. Condolences to Abigail and the entire Gerdts family.
Betsy Boone
April 23, 2020
I had the pleasure of working for Bill as a research assistant--there was never a better introduction to the New York Public Library--and taking seminars with him at the Graduate Center. Bill would stop in the midst of a lecture to throw out possible dissertation topics. It was during one of those classes that he put up a genre painting by George Henry Hall, stopped to take a breath, and announced with excitement, "now that would be an excellent topic--Americans in Spain. You have John Singer Sargent, Mary Cassatt... and George Henry Hall!" The various strands of my life came together in an instant, and my future was mapped. His lessons will stay with me for many years to come.
M. Elizabeth (Betsy) Boone, PhD, University of Alberta
Author of The Spanish Element in Our Nationality: Spain and America at the World's Fairs and Centennial Celebrations, 18761915 (2019) and Vistas de España: American Views of Art and Life in Spain, 18601914 (2007)
David Setford
April 22, 2020
May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.
Gayle Skluzacek
April 22, 2020
My heartfelt sympathy goes out to the Gerdts family. Dr. Gerdts reinforced my love of American art as well as teaching. He was the epitome of a scholar and a mench. His willingness to share his knowledge and excitement about an artist or a topic was inspirational. RIP Professor.
Michael Grauer
April 21, 2020
Bill was a mentor to me and never failed to answer--nearly always in a way tinged with humor--one of my strange inquiries from far off West Texas. Happy trails, pard. Much obliged.
Jean OBrien
April 20, 2020
A true gentleman and scholar. He will be missed by all who knew him and will be remembered by all who were lucky enough to study with him. There are not many who were his equal. Sincere condolences to all his family and friends. To live in the memory of family and friends is to live forever.
Anne DePietro
April 20, 2020
Bill was, and to me will always remain, the dean of American paintings. There was no one like him for his extraordinary depth of knowledge. He was truly a friend, and I was fortunate to have worked with him on a number of exhibitions and projects throughout my professional career. His farewell lecture upon his retirement from the Graduate Center at CUNY, on the history of the spittoon in American art, was unforgettable. My most sincere condolences to his wife, Abigail, and family.
Mary Walsh
April 19, 2020
I am so very proud to have been able to know Prof. Gerdts personally. If you studied American art history, you knew the name, he was the rock star. He was the scholar many dealers in American art looked to as first and foremost. It seems he was always around, looking at everything, in person. That is actually a rare thing. Condolences to Abby and the family. And thank you for the bravery of mentioning the cause of death, I think it is important to history.
Kevin Mullen
April 19, 2020
Bill was one of my first customers when I entered the book trade. He was always kind, unlike some others with whom I have worked with over these past 28 years, and I hope The Lord can read his handwriting, 'cause I always had trouble with it! His kindness, depth of knowledge and willingness to share what he had discovered set a high standard to which many can aspire and attain if they so chose. RIP
Kevin Mullen, Bookseller
(or bookseller, as Bill always typed it)
David Martin
April 19, 2020
This is such sad news. Although I did not formally study with Bill, I knew him for 30 years through mutual friends. He was the most influential person in my professional life. I am a curator and art historian in Seattle and Bill had a sincere interest in our regional art and all of my projects. Even though I do not have an art history degree, he treated me like an equal. I will never forget his kind generosity and our many years of comparing notes on obscure artists and his decades of valuable advice. The art world owes him a huge debt of gratitude. Rest in Peace.
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