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Fédération Internationale de la Médaille d'Art
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in memoriam - 2022

Chizuko Nakaji (1925 - 2022)

NakajiChizuko Nakaji was born in Saga Prefecture, Japan in 1925 and began living in Manchuria when her father joined the Manchuria Railway. She graduated from Japan Women's University in 1944 and repatriated to Japan after the war ended in 1948.

After returning to Japan, she studied painting at the Central Art Institute and aspired to become a painter, but was fascinated by sculpture and started stone carving.

Her work was first selected for an exhibition organised by the Japan Sculptor Society in 1954. (She continued to exhibit until 2002). She pursued an energetic art career and participated in numerous exhibitions. She joined the Japan Art Medal Association in 1980 and was elected a member of the Nitten(The Japan Fine Arts Exhibition) in 1987.

In Mobara, Chiba Prefecture, where she lived in her later years, a number of her public artworks were installed, and in 2008 the Mobara Municipal Museum of Art held the 'Sculptor Chizuko Nakaji Works of Love' exhibition for 45 days.

As for her involvement with FIDEM, she exhibited her first medal at the 22nd FIDEM Helsinki Congress in 1990. Since then, she exhibited at FIDEM from 1992 until the Glasgow Congress in 2012, and attended every Congress until the age of 87. In addition to this, she also exhibited her work in medal exhibitions around the world at the invitation of her FIDEM friends. FIDEM for her was absolute and she really loved her FIDEM friends.

Chizuko passed away at home on 10 August 2022 in the presence of her family (aged 97).

We would like to express our deepest condolences to her family and friends.

 Toshiaki Yamada
Japan Art Medal Association  
Delegate


 

Jane McAdam Freud (1958 - 2022)

The British sculptor and medallist Jane McAdam Freud passed away in August.

 



Eileen Cuhaj (1932 - 2022)

 

 

Eileen (Petrow) Cuhaj was born on August 3, 1932 in Astoria NY. She was a FIDEM member for several years and participated and accompanied her son George Cuhaj to several FIDEM congresses.

They founded the George Cuhaj Prize which recognizes promising artists under the age of 30 by awarding them a monetary prize. Both Eileen and George sponsored this prize. The first prize was awarded at the FIDEM congress in Paris in 2002.

 

 

 

Eileen and George Cuhaj at the 2012 congress, Glasgow

 



Annette Koek (1954 - 2022)

Dutch sculptor and medallist has passed away.

 


 

Chester Y. Martin (1934 - 2022)

Chester Y. Martin, US Mint sculptor and engraver, medal artist, oil and water color painter and ceramicist, passed away in March.

 


 

Theo van de Vathorst (1934 - 2022)

I met Theo during the FIDEM congress in Weimar in 2000. I was new to FIDEM and was introduced to Theo by Bud Wertheim. He swept me away in his tales about medals and his art as a sculptor. I met him again two years later in Paris and there he asked me if I remembered what he had told me the previous time, had I learned and kept the lesson in my head? He told me to forget everything and just open my hand and close my eyes. I felt a little button sized object being placed there, not metal but rounded and not flat. He asked me to really feel it, touch it - not like a curator with white gloves -, describe it and guess what was on it. I had a bit of trouble but could feel elevated letters and some kind of shape but could not place it. He asked me to open up my eyes and said: "you passed the test". How come, after all I had not guessed the elephant depicted on it nor the inscription. "All of that is not important, what is important is that you dared to touch and feel it and most important you dared to tell me, the artist, what you 'saw' with your fingers, that is an important part of medal art. If you have not held the medal, you are not going to see what is on it".

Elephant Thank You - Theo van de Vathorst
Photo: M. Voisin Pelsdonk

 

Theo and his wife came to see my husband in 2019, he had medals for the XXXVI FIDEM congress in Tokyo. Around our kitchen table, he told us about his art and what he had been up to. He spoke about a series of small medals he had made with animals on it. I went to fetch my little elephant. He did not remember giving it to me but I told him what his lesson had meant to me.

Thank you Theo, you are going to be greatly missed

Marie-Astrid Voisin Pelsdonk

 

 


 

Ann Shaper Pollack (1932 - 2022)

It is with great sadness to announce that Ann Shaper Pollack, past president of American Medallic Sculpture Association, passed away on January 12 in Dedham, Massachusetts.  Born in Louisville, Kentucky, she eventually moved to Great Neck, New York, where she raised her family with her husband Jay, pursuing a career in the Arts.  Ann was gifted in multiple media, including silversmithing and medallic art.  She became an avid member of FIDEM supporting the younger generation of medallists through scholarships and awards, and especially through Medialia Gallery’s program “New Approach” and “New Ideas in Medallic Sculpture”.  After Jay’s death in 2015, Ann established “The Jason S. Pollack Award for Excellence in Contemporary Techniques in Medallic Art” to be presented at the FIDEM Congresses, the first being at FIDEM XXXIV held in Ghent, Belgium.

A mentor and a participant in FIDEM Congresses since the 1980’s, Ann was always one to join “first”.  First to sign up for workshops, first to send in entries to exhibitions, first to pay her membership dues, she was the glue that held American medallists together.  As curator to many art exhibits through her multiple art organization such as the Pen and Brush of New York, her attention to detail was exemplary.  She encouraged the memberships not only in creating medals, but in sharing the medallic process.  A giant in our small specialized art world, she will be truly missed.

Jeanne Stevens-Sollman

My Personal Space Ship (2015) -
Sterling silver, cast, 60 x 95 mm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo:  Chizuko at the 2012 congress, Glasgow

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Absence / Presence
2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No Words 2
2001-2002

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo: George Cuhaj