F h bresler biography

Michael Bresler

Dr. Bresler was born April 4, 1945 in New York, New York the son of the late Harvey and Esther (Ruskay) Bresler. Michael graduated from Northwestern University and was a member of the American Academy of Psychotherapists and the American Psychological Association. He was in private practice over 30 years, and served the community for the past 15 years in his capacity as a clinical psychologist at Bridgman Psychological Services.

Born: April 4, 1945 Place of Birth: New York, New York Death: February 16, 2007 Place of Death: Rochester, Minnesota&nbspSurvivors include his wife, Dyanne Bresler; three children – Dathan (Cari) Paterno of Park Ridge, Illinois, Elizabeth Dote of Lake Zurich, Illinois, and Diana Paterno of Ann Arbor, Michigan; four grandchildren – Micayla Paterno, Eden Paterno, Kirk Paterno, and Sofia Dote; and two sisters – Lynne (Walter) Bodle of Seattle, Washington and Jane (Jack) Katz of Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Viewing

Wednesday February 21, 2007 , 12noon - 1pm at Pike Funeral Home, Boyd Chapel

Memorial

The reception in the USA of the etchings by Auguste Brouet reflects an evolution of the tastes and the trends of the time. In the early XXth century, the period preceding the Great War is a passing ebb for the print market in America. The boom of the 1880s has long been over. Art merchants feel that a new strategy is needed and they work towards the education of the public in an attempt to revive and fuel interest in prints. Keppel, who launched the Print Collector's Quarterlyin 1911  is probably the best-known among them, but he was far from pursuing this line alone. Another well-known american dealer interested in prints at that time was Edward Brandus.

[A Family of Rag-Pickers] (ca 1910 ?),
a color etching by Auguste Brouet, which seems to be a reminiscence of the Old Clothes Dealer in Saint-Ouen(Ba 81).
In addition to his painting business, Brandus decided to build upon the success of the colour etchingswhich were not only published but also actively promoted by the Galerie Georges Petit in Paris. The First New York Salon of Original Etchings in Colors by Engrav

Newsletter

May, 2015


The Foundation is pleased to announce the addition of two important and rare Niedecken acquisitions: The table lamp from the Irving House and a Frank Lloyd Wright designed desk from the Bresler House.

The table lamp from the Edward P. Irving house, designed by George Mann Niedecken and manufactured by the Niedecken-Walbridge Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is made from quarter sawn white oak, colored glass, and copper, measuring 24" high by 23 ½" long by 15" wide.

This is how David Cathers describes the lamp in the upcoming Arts & Crafts Lighting from the Collection of the Two Red Roses Foundation:

"An architectonic form with a footed, two-part rectangular oak base resting on mitered feet, and paired, spindle-shaped oak standards decorated at the top with sawn oak squares and triangles silhouetted against translucent white glass panels. These geometric motifs are restated in the fixture's glass shade. Translucent, roof-like geometric leaded glass shade flanked by opaque leaded glass flanges; the stained glass has a hammered texture

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