Dorothy Adlow was a nationally known art critic and lecturer from Boston.
Early life and education
She was born in Boston on June 7, 1901, to Jewish immigrant parents. Her father, Nathan Adlow, emigrated as a youth from Kazarez, Poland, and opened a furniture store in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston. Her mother, Bessie Adlow, was born in Dauge, Lithuania. Her brother, Elijah Adlow, eventually became chief justice of the Boston Municipal Court. Dorothy grew up in Roxbury and attended Girls' Latin School. At her mother's urging, and despite her father's warnings that "if she gets too educated, she'll never marry," she went on to earn a bachelor's and a master's degree from Radcliffe College, graduating in 1923.
Career
After college, Adlow worked briefly for the Boston Evening Transcript before beginning a 41-year career as an art critic for the Christian Science Monitor. She was the only member of the staff who was not a Christian Scientist. By her mid-twenties, she had achieved a remarkable level of independence and professional success for a young woman of her time. To supplement her income, Adlow traveled widely, lecturing at colleges and museums and serving as an art juror. In 1930 she lectured at the Carnegie International exhibit series in Pittsburgh, the first woman to do so. She also appeared frequently on television programs produced by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and taught at the Katharine Gibbs School. Adlow was Boston's leading art critic during the 1940s, when the city's art scene changed dramatically. She regularly attended exhibitions at the Museum School and discussed the students' work with Karl Zerbe. Jean Gibran, wife of the artistKahlil Gibran, names Adlow in her memoir as one of those who contributed to the "flowering" of Boston Expressionism.
Personal life
In 1931, at the age of thirty, Adlow married composer-conductor Nicolas Slonimsky. She kept her maiden name and continued working, providing a small but steady income for the household while her husband's fortunes fluctuated. Her daughter Electra was born in 1933. Adlow corresponded frequently with her husband, who traveled a great deal. She carefully saved his letters, but her own letters to him have been lost. Her daughter published a posthumous collection of Slonimsky's letters titled Dear Dorothy: Letters from Nicolas Slonimsky to Dorothy Adlow. She died of a heart attack on January 11, 1964, at her home on Beacon Street in Boston, aged 62.
Awards and honors
1947: Honorary Phi Beta Kappa membership, Radcliffe College