Age, Biography and Wiki

Terry Friedman was born on 1940, is an American art historian. Discover Terry Friedman's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 73 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 73 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1940, 1940
Birthday 1940
Birthplace N/A
Date of death 2013
Died Place N/A
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1940. He is a member of famous historian with the age 73 years old group.

Terry Friedman Height, Weight & Measurements

At 73 years old, Terry Friedman height not available right now. We will update Terry Friedman's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Not Available
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Terry Friedman Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Terry Friedman worth at the age of 73 years old? Terry Friedman’s income source is mostly from being a successful historian. He is from . We have estimated Terry Friedman's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income historian

Terry Friedman Social Network

Instagram
Linkedin
Twitter
Facebook
Wikipedia
Imdb

Timeline

1888

'Charity and Justice',1888 by William Hamo Thorneycroft was purchased in 2015 ‘in memory of Dr Terry Friedman, former Principal Keeper of Leeds Art Gallery, with assistance from the Art Fund and Leeds Art Fund’.

1940

Terence Frederick Friedman (1940-2013) was an American-born art and architectural historian and museum curator.

After his death in Leeds, UK, The Sculpture Journal, in their tribute, defined him as ‘a rare being - a scholar curator working in a regional museum, and an outstanding art historian, educator and collector’.

1955

He attended the Temple Beth El synagogue where he was a confirmand in 1955.

1960

After completing his PhD in the late 1960s, Dr Friedman moved to Leeds to take up his first postdoctoral position as Keeper of Decorative Art Studies at Temple Newsam House.

It was a new and unique role set up specifically to run the BA degree course in the history of decorative arts and museum studies which had been the brainchild of Professor Quentin Bell of Leeds University and Robert Rowe, director of Leeds Art Galleries.

The degree in itself was an innovative collaboration between university and municipal gallery and its location revived Temple Newsam as a place of learning.

1964

After graduating from the University of Michigan he moved to London in 1964 to undertake postgraduate studies at the Courtauld Institute of Art.

His doctoral thesis on James Gibbs, an influential British architect perhaps best known for St Martin-in-the-Fields, formed the basis of Friedman's first major publication.

1969

In 1969 Terry Friedman moved to Leeds where he spent the rest of his life, becoming an honorary ‘Loiner’.

1972

From relatively unknown sculptors such as Joseph Gott (1972 exhibition which went on to Liverpool's Walker Art Gallery) to artists and sculptors early in their careers, for example, George Meyrick (1984), Andy Goldsworthy (1985) and Peter Randall-Page (1992) who Friedman championed.

He had a particular rapport with the sculptor Andy Goldsworthy who had an association with Yorkshire having grown up in Leeds.

1982

In 1982 the Queen opened The Henry Moore Sculpture Gallery within the newly renovated Leeds Art Gallery complex and Terry Friedman became its Principal Keeper whilst still maintaining his teaching role.

The move to Leeds City Art Gallery was primarily to establish the Henry Moore Centre for the Study of Sculpture within the gallery; an agreement having been reached between the Henry Moore Foundation and Leeds City Council to create a centre for the study and appreciation of fine arts, primarily sculpture.

Friedman became its first head.

This period in his career was to be a productive decade of important exhibitions, astute acquisitions and the imparting of knowledge through lectures and scholarly well-designed and illustrative catalogues, the cost of which he endeavoured to keep as low as possible so students could afford them.

The first exhibition at the newly opened Sculpture Gallery in 1982, ‘Henry Moore: Early Carvings 1920–1940’, dedicated to the man whose name graced the doors, was well received and it was to be the first of many which celebrated sculpture in all its forms since ‘Terry’s broad definition of sculpture to include casts, garden and architectural sculpture, coins, medals and sketches was ahead of its time’.

From surrealism and pop art through to what is considered more conventional sculpture, Terry Friedman curated many well-received exhibitions at both Temple Newsam House and Leeds City Art Gallery.

1987

The 1987 exhibition (with Evelyn Silber) ‘Jacob Epstein – Sculpture and Drawings’ travelled on to the Whitechapel Gallery, London when Nicholas Serota was its Director.

Both were perfectionists and Evelyn Silber told a story at the Colloquium of how she had to, metaphorically speaking, pull them apart when an argument erupted over a particular case of exhibits as time was running out to open the Gallery to the Press.

1990

The retrospective survey of Goldsworthy's early work in the 1990 exhibition ‘Hand to Earth’, which also toured, was accompanied by a catalogue in which Terry Friedman ‘assembled Goldsworthy’s lyrical photographs of his own works plus interviews and essays by ten contributors, among them an ecologist, an art historian, several curators and the novelist John Fowles.

The combination of superlative illustrations and incisive texts makes it the most authoritative and comprehensive publication available on Andy Goldsworthy’s early work’ and it has been reprinted several times.

1993

It was to be a role he fulfilled until 1993 when he retired early to devote his time to what was to be his final book that involved extensive research in churches, chapels, vestries, vicarages, archives and county record offices all over Britain.

In 1993 the Henry Moore Centre for the Study of Sculpture was renamed the Henry Moore Institute, moved into new premises, and Penelope Curtis succeeded Terry Friedman as its head.

His last major exhibition at the gallery in 1993 was a tribute to the influential Yorkshire-born art critic Herbert Read, whose son, Benedict Read edited and contributed to the exhibition catalogue, Herbert Read : A British Vision of World Art.

1996

At Goldsworthy's invitation, Terry also contributed to Wood (1996) and Time (2000).

Other notable exhibitions curated by Terry Friedman included two celebrating Jacob Epstein, considered, by the Sculpture Journal, to be an undervalued figure in twentieth-century sculpture at the time.

2004

Despite serious illness and major brain surgery in 2004 the book was published in 2011.

2012

His book, The Eighteenth-Century Church in Britain, the first substantial study of the subject to appear in over half a century, won the William MB Berger Prize for British Art History in 2012.

Terry Friedman was born in Detroit and raised in a liberal Jewish family.

2015

The Terry Friedman Colloquium, held in May 2015 at Leeds Art Gallery, brought together a large group of friends and colleagues ‘to celebrate the life and achievement of the man from Detroit who had seen the point of Leeds’.

In his obituary, the Yorkshire Post alluded to the major contribution he made to the cultural life of his adopted city and in a report of Friedman's Colloquium for the Public Monuments and Sculpture Association, the art historian, James Hamilton concluded ‘Every city needs a Terry Friedman; but there was only one.

Lucky Leeds.

Lucky us’.

Friedman's love of collecting led to his flat in Chapel Allerton, which he humorously called ‘Palazzo Friedman’, being compared to an art gallery; the only difference being the lack of labelling.

Friedman gifted much of his collection to institutions, often local.

For example, a painting by Percy Hague Jowett is held in the collection of The Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds and he made other generous donations to Leeds Museums & Galleries Collection and that of the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art.

The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art was another recipient of Friedman's largesse.

2016

At the Colloquium, a book, Cornucopia : Essays on architecture, sculpture and decorative art in honour of Terry Friedman, was launched and, in 2016, a new acquisition for the Leeds Museums and Galleries Sculpture Collection was exhibited for the first time at the Henry Moore Institute.

2018

He was also a highly acclaimed author and respected as a leading authority on 18th century ecclesiastical architecture.