Isabelle Hall Fiske Calhoun (“Barbara”)
Rochester--
Isabelle “Barbara” Fiske Calhoun, 94, painter, cartoonist,
and, with her former husband, Irving Fiske, co-creator of Vermont’s oldest
alternative community and artist’s retreat, Quarry Hill Creative Center in
Rochester, died April 28, 2014 at Brookside Nursing Home in White River
Junction.
She
was born in Tucson, Arizona, on September 9, 1919, the daughter of John Hall,
Jr., and Isabelle (Daniel Jones) Hall. She came from an old Southern family. As
her grandmother’s obituary states, “their names were written in the history of
Virginia and the Carolinas.” The family fought for independence during the
Revolutionary War.
Her
mother and uncle moved to Tucson in around 1915 to try to cure her uncle’s
tuberculosis, without success. They homesteaded a ranch there, “The “Double J.”
Her mother rode horseback to town
and back, nine miles each way, to her work as a newspaper reporter. There she
met John Hall, Jr., from Mobile, Alabama, whom she married on Mar. 20, 1918. When
Barbara (then called “Babs”) was six months old, John died of Spanish influenza
in Phoenix, Az where he was editor of a local newspaper.
Her
mother, who never remarried, was eventually elected as Clerk of Pima County Superior
Court.
Barbara
was educated in Tucson schools. As she had an unusually vivid talent for drawing
and painting, she later attended art school in Los Angeles, and then moved to
New York in around 1940.
She
met Irving Fiske, playwright and freelance writer, in Greenwich Village, where
he was living in around 1943, and they fell in love. During WWII she was
drawing “Girl Commandoes” and other strips for Harvey Comics. She had to draw
under the name “B. Hall” as cartooning was “a man’s profession” at the time.
However, all the male cartoonists were in the Armed Forces.
She
also painted in egg tempera and pastel. She was a figurative painter, who loved
landscapes and the human form, in opposition to the Abstract Expressionists
such as Jackson Pollock who were also painting in the Village at that time.
On
January 8, 1946, she and Irving Fiske married and on April 10, 1946, bought an
old hill farm (the Loren Spencer farm) in the hills behind Rochester. They
opened it as an artists and writers retreat for friends from New York, and
eventually for anyone with an open mind and a freethinking attitude. There were
(and are) few rules for life at Quarry Hill. No spanking, “putting down,” or verbal
abuse of children is permitted, and no hunting, fishing, or harming of animals
is allowed, though no one is compelled to be a vegetarian.
For
years Barbara taught art to children from town. Many have fond memories of
these lessons. In 1950 she had a daughter, Isabella, and in 1954, a son,
William, who died in 2008.
In
1964, Barbara opened a storefront, The
Gallery Gwen, in New York’s East Village, where she exhibited her paintings
and those of friends. Irving began to give talks on philosophy and religion
there, and as a result, many began to come to Quarry Hill. During the “hip era” of the 60s, Quarry
Hill was flooded with young people, many with artistic aspirations. A number of these built houses and stayed
for years or decades, many bearing children. Quarry Hill created its own school,
The North Hollow School, several of whom became valedictorians at Rochester High
School. Quarry Hill, in the 1990s, had a population of 90 people. It is still
visited each year by many people from all over the world, who consider it their
second home.
In
the 1970s, Barbara divorced Irving Fiske, created Lyman Hall, Inc., which now
runs Quarry Hill, and opened a gallery in Randolph, where she displayed her
artwork and that of others. She spent time in the 1980s as a caregiver to the
elderly, and also attended Vermont College, where she obtained an MFA in Art
History and met Dr. Donald W. Calhoun, a Quaker who was a sociologist at the University
of Miami. Barbara also became a Quaker and they were married in a Friends’
wedding in Miami, FL in 1989.
The two remained happily married till his death in 2009,
living at Quarry Hill in the summer and Florida in the winter, though Don
eventually had to go into a nursing home in Berlin, VT, as he was disabled from
an automobile accident some years before.
A friendship grew between the Calhouns and Irving Fiske. Barbara
spent the last years of her life at Quarry Hill Creative Center, looked after
by a group of caring helpers and her daughter Isabella and son-in-law Brion
McFarlin. She was an inspiration
to all who knew her in energy and artistic ability. Her cartoon work appears in
The Great Women Cartoonists by Trina Robbins (Watson-Guptill, 2001), and she has a
place in the online cartoonists’ museum Lambiek
Comicopedia, based in the Netherlands. Her paintings appeared in many shows
over the years. Most of her
paintings are in the Fiske Family Archives at Quarry Hill.
Barbara
is survived by Isabella and Brion McFarlin, grandchildren Joya Lonsdale and her
husband Brem Hyde, Andrew McFarlin and Eva and Jason Us; their mother Stefani
Us, by William’s former wife Anne Fitzgerald, and by two great-grandchildren.
She also leaves many friends and admirers of her art.
-- Isabella
Fiske McFarlin
Barbara lived an exceptionally interesting & eventful life. May her memory live on in Quarry Hill & in your hearts <3
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mary....
DeleteGeorge Bernard Shaw was fascinated by Quarry Hill, or the idea of the thing, since he never came here. But he enjoyed communicating with Irving and considered hm a worthy mind with which to carry on a debate.
ReplyDelete