- Walter Conrad Arensberg
Walter Conrad Arensberg (April 4, 1878 - January 29, 1954) was an American art collector, critic and poet. His father was part owner and president of a crucible steel company. He majored in English and philosophy at Harvard University. With his wife Louise (1879-1953), he collected art and supported artistic endeavors.
Between 1913 and 1950 the couple collected the works of Modern artists such as
Marcel Duchamp ,Charles Sheeler ,Walter Pach ,Beatrice Wood , andElmer Ernest Southard , as well asPre-Columbian art. They donated their collection to thePhiladelphia Museum of Art including correspondence, ephemera, clippings, writings, personal and art collection records, and photographs documenting the couple's art collecting activities as well as their friendship with many important artists, writers and scholars.Intrigued with writer
Francis Bacon , particularly the aspects ofalchemy ,cryptography ,Rosicrucianism , and, inevitably, the Shakespeare-Bacon debate, the Arensbergs researched his work. In 1937 they established theFrancis Bacon Foundation inLos Angeles intending to promote "research in history, philosophy, science, literature, and art, with special reference to the life and works of Francis Bacon" and in 1954 endowed it with funds and their collection of Baconiana. The Foundation's library was transferred to the Huntington Library in 1995.Arensberg's work "The cryptography of Shakespeare" (1922) claims to find
acrostic s andanagram s in the published works of Shakespeare which reveal the name of Bacon. In "The secret grave of Francis Bacon and his mother in theLichfield chapter house" (1923) and "The Shakespearean mystery" (1928) he used a "key cipher" to find further messages connected with the Rosicrucians.Analysis byWilliam Friedman andElizebeth Friedman [William and Elizebeth Friedman, "The Shakespearean ciphers examined",Cambridge University Press , 1957. Chapter X.] shows that none of the methods hascryptographic validity.Several volumes of his Symbolist-influenced verse were also published, including 1914's "Poems" and 1916's "Idols". His poem "Voyage a l'Infini" was anthologized by
Edmund Clarence Stedman .External links
* [http://www.philamuseum.org/resources/mellon-archives/collections.shtml Philadelphia Museum of Art]
** [http://www.philamuseum.org/pma_archives/ead.php?c=WLA&p=hn "Historical note" about the Arensbergs and their collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art website]
* [http://www.sirfrancisbacon.org/Fndatpage.htm Francis Bacon Foundation]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.