Artist and writer Robert Seydel (1960-2011) often used personas and
fictional constructs in a vast body of work that incorporated collage,
drawing, photography and writing. His primary alter ego Ruth
Greisman--banker by day, artist by night, friend of Marcel Duchamp and
Joseph Cornell--lived in Queens, caring for her shell-shocked brother, a
veteran of WWI. This book collects Ruth's "journal pages," typed on
paper purloined from old photo albums and adorned with drawings,
narrating Ruth's inner life and the tenuous creation of self. She says,
"I'll invent who I am, against what is. My time and name: a Queens of
the mind." All of Ruth's works--collages, journal pages and
drawings--were purportedly discovered buried in boxes of miscellanea in
the Joseph Cornell Study Center at the Smithsonian's Archives of
American Art and in the family garage. A definitive selection will be
exhibited at the Neilson Library, Smith College.