3053

PHYLLIS DELAPPE

San Francisco/New York, 1916-2007

Portrait of a woman, 1945.

Signed and dated lower right "Pele '45".
Pencil on thick tracing paper, 18" x 12". Matted 19" x 16".
Condition: Handling wear and hard horizontal fold 2.5" from sheet's bottom. Small loss to lower right corner of sheet.

The absence of a condition report does not imply an object is free of defects. All items may have normal signs of age and wear commensurate with their age; these issues will likely not be mentioned in the condition report. Please contact Eldred's before the auction with any condition questions. Questions about condition will not be answered after purchase. Condition reports are provided as a courtesy, and we are not responsible for any errors or omissions. Important note on frames: Frames are not guaranteed to be in the same condition as they are in the item photograph. Due to handling and shipping, many frames, especially antique ones, are prone to losses. If you have questions about the condition of a frame, please contact us prior to the auction. 

  • Provenance: Notes:
    "Artist and journalist Pele de Lappe was a social realist in many artistic ways capturing the day to day lives of the working-class people. Born in San Francisco and encouraged to pursue art by her father, also an artist, Delappe attended the California School of Fine Arts, now presently known as the San Francisco Art Institute, under the modernist and fellow social realist Arnold Blanch. She later studied at the Art Students League in New York where she became good friends with Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo. While in New York, she first lived in the artists' colony of Woodstock before moving into Manhattan where she met other artists like Kenneth Hayes Miller and John Sloane.

    In 1934, de Lappe returned to San Francisco and in the 1940s she was an art instructor at the California Labor School. In the early 1950s, she co-founded the San Francisco Graphic Arts Workshop and eventually worked as the editor and the only white staff for the West Oakland Beacon, a short-lived African-American oriented newspaper.

    Aside from working in newspaper publications, de Lappe also continued on to advocate social justice through her lithographs, frescos, etchings, and paintings that focused on everyday people and jazz musicians. Even when bound to a wheelchair, de Lappe maintained her determined commitment to political activism, continuing to make art and joining picket lines.

    Described as endearingly smart and fun with a sense of humor that can make the most boring situations wildly interesting in the best way possible, Pele de Lappe lived a full life fighting for racial justice, women's equality, and workers' rights."

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October 23, 2025 9:30 AM EDT
East Dennis, MA, US

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