APPENDIX ONE

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(Simeon) Leon Engers (Kennedy) (1891–1970)

by Frank van Lamoen, Assistant Curator, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam

The following are the notes created by Frank van Lamoen documenting his research into the life of Leon Engers.

1843

Dec. 7, 1843: Levie Salomon Engers, a Jewish baker (Winschoten 1822– Groningen 1903), marries Betje Izak Schwab (Groningen 1816–1876). The couple had nine children, Mozes (born 1858) being the youngest.

1858

Sept. 29, 1858: Father of Leon, Mozes Engers, born in Winschoten (later profession: controleur graanladingen = inspector of corn shipments).

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Fig. A1.1. Leon S. Engers, Director, School of Art, Bradley University, Peoria, Illinois; from circa 1955

1867

March 31, 1867: Mother, Paula Schwabacher, born in Odessa, daughter of a German rabbi, Simon Leon (Shimon Aryeh/Simeon Löb) Schwabacher (Oberndorf 1819–Odessa 1888).

Leon is named after his grandfather. (The Schwabacher family is difficult to trace, because the rabbi lived in several German places before moving to Odessa. Descendants of Paula’s brothers, Leon’s cousins, migrated to the United States.)

1888 (or earlier)

Mozes Engers starts a firm in Rotterdam. Address: Wijnstraat 53.

1889

Address of Mozes Engers: Coolvest 69; office: Wijnstraat 53.

1890

May 8, 1890: Marriage of Mozes Engers and Paula Schwabacher in Odessa (mentioned in a newspaper, Haagsche Courant, May 12, 1890: M. Engers, Rotterdam/P. Schwabacher, Odessa).

1891

Simeon Leon Engers born in Antwerp, Feb. 22, 1891 (but his nationality is Dutch). See Antwerp police immigration records, no. 69.364 (GS film no. 2234441). “Adopted son of a multi-millionaire” (?) Crowley, Confessions.

1891

Address Mozes Engers’s office: Boompjes 14-16 (Jewish quarter).

1892

Amsterdam City Archives:

May 5, 1892: Paula Schwabacher (& Leon), from Antwerp to Amsterdam.

1893

March 16, 1893: Record of marriage (again?) of Mozes Engers and Paula Schwabacher in Amsterdam.

March 20, 1893: To Russia.

Nov. 20, 1983: In Amsterdam; address: Nicolaas Witsenstraat 12.

1894

June 5, 1894: Leon’s sister Beatrice born in Amsterdam. (Murdered in Auschwitz, 1942.)

1901

Oct. 18, 1901: Family moves to Merau (Tyrol).

1903

Mozes Engers’s office address: Boompjes 69, Rotterdam.

1904

Mozes Engers’s office address: Boompjes 70.

1904–1918

Berlin Adressbücher: Mozes Engers, “privatier” (person of private means), lives on Kurfürstendamm 24 (Berlin W 15) (and Reederijstraat 8, Rotterdam).

1907

Firma M. Engers (Company): Mozes, his brother Izaak (= Isak Levi) (Groningen 1856–Rotterdam 1924), and Johan E. M. Sijlmans.

1909

Journal de psychologie, normale et pathologique, mémoire, imagination et opérations intellectuelles (1909), 356–57: review of “colored thinking” by Harris (Fraser-D.), in The Journal of Abnormal Psychology (June/July 1908), pp. 97–113. Mentions “psychochromes” (as a concept or phenomenon; source for Engers’ ideas?).

1910

Mozes Engers’s office: Boompjes 70 b.

1910

Oct. 10, 1910 Militieregisters (Military service registers): Leon Engers, artist, vrijgesteld vanwege lichamelijke gebreken (not suitable for service, bad eyesight; an affliction of the cornea). Family lives in Germany.

1911

Firma M. Engers has branches in London, Hull, Hamburg, Bremen.

1911

Summer 1911: Crowley in Paris, 50 Rue Vavin.

1911 (maybe earlier: ca. 1908?): Leon Engers in Paris: Académie Julian; studios: Rue de Dragon 16./Sorbonne?

1912

Jan. 27, 1912: John Middleton Murray to Katherine Mansfield: “. . . since when I knew Crowley in Paris he had some other fellow, Kennedy.”

1912

Sept. 23, 1912: Leon Engers joins AimageAimage (Kaczynski, Perdurabo).

1913

June 30, 1913: Crowley’s studio at 76 Fulham Road, London, after the death of John Yarker (March 20), Leon Engers, Patriarch Grand Secretary General, Order of the Ancient & Primitive Rite of Memphis and Mizraim.

Poem by AC: “To Lionel Engers-Kennedy: to the memory of Hargrave Jennings: and to A. C. W. G. and H. E. H.” in The Equinox, September, 1913, p. 91.

1914

Oct.: AC in New York.

1916

London 1916 Kelley’s Post Office Directory: Kennedy, Leon Engers: 2 Boltons Studios, Redcliffe Road SW.

Nov. 15, 1916: Leon lives in The Hague, Prinsestraat 99 (coming from London).

Dec. 16, 1916: Leaves Rotterdam; ship: SS Nieuw Amsterdam.

1917

Jan. 2, 1917: Arrival New York. Ellis Island records: Simeon Leon Engers (Dutch), last place of residence Rotterdam, Boompjes 70 b (his father’s office). Address in New York: Equitable Trust Co.

WWI Draft registration cards 1917–1918: Address: 700 W. 70 St., N.Y. Race: Caucasian.

March 1917 (maybe later): AC stays at Engers’ place, Lower 5th Avenue, N.Y.

AC as a painter possibly encouraged by Engers?

June 13, 1917, Berlin, Charlottenburg: Beatrice Engers marries Johann (Hans) Wolpe (July 3, 1887, Libau, Lithuania–March 6, 1944, Auschwitz). Merchant, later bank director.

Sept. 18, 1917, The Magical Records of the Beast 666, diaries 1914-1920: “Success to Kennedy’s psychochromes” [= Frater T. A. T. K. A.].

Nov. 1917: AC arranges an exhibition of Engers’s psychochromes; review in The International (Kaczynski).

1918

April 2, 1918: Mozes Engers dies suddenly in Stuttgart, where he stayed temporarily, Augustenstrasse 79.

June 17, 1918, Berlin, Charlottenburg: Hans (later, John) Max Joachim Wolpe born, son of Beatrice. (John committed suicide May 1, 1963.)

1919

Paula Schwabacher, widow of Mozes Engers lives in Berlin, Charlottenburg, Uhlandstrasse 197 (address of J. H. Wolpe & Co.).

Jan. 5, 1919: Oakland Tribune (magazine section), on Engers’ paintings; also in Fort Wayne Journal Gazette. (Id. in the Atlanta Constitution (Kaczynski).

Feb. 1919: Exhibition of psychochromes at the Paint Box Galleries in Washington Square South (Kaczynski); Feb. 16, 1919, New York Tribune.

The Quill 4, no. 2 (1919): exhibition of psychochromes with “excessively blue portrait” of AC.

March 2, 1919, The Sun: “Is Greenwich Village really psychic?” (Paint Box Galleries review): “‘Psychochromes’ by Leon Engers-Kennedy, have been exposed to public view . . . and no undue disturbance has occurred, no windows smashed, no noses tweaked, no riotous processions nor letters to the public press; yet Mr. Kennedy insists that an advance in art has been made, that this is a new movement in which for the first time ‘the eye of the soul directs the hand of the craftsman.’”

March 25, 1919: Anna Schwabacher née Nierenstein (Kiev 1865) dies in Eppendorfer Krankenhaus. Anna was married to Albert Schwabacher (Paula’s brother). Sons: Simon, Henry, Sonya.

May 8, 1919, New York: Leon Engers marries Catherine Elizabeth Reilly “a very beautiful red headed Irish typist . . .” (Confessions), born March 26, 1895, New York (died Feb. 4, 1959). In 1910, Catherine lived at Manhattan Ward 20, N.Y., with her mother, also named Catherine E., a sister, and two brothers: John G. (13), Jennie (10), Joseph R. (8)—no father around.

Reproduction of Portrait of AC by Leon Engers in The Equinox III (1) Detroit, 1919.

Oil on canvas, 1917–1918, 36 x 24 in. (91.6 x 61 cm). NPG 6630 (purchased 2003).

Check provenance: archiveenquiry@npg.org.uk

1919?

Leon (and his wife) return to Europe, to Holland according to AC’s Confessions (but the family lived in Berlin)—I assume he inherited his part of the family fortune.

1919 (ca.)–before 1925

Leon Engers: student of Lyonel Feininger, Bauhaus Weimar./Ph.D. Berlin? (check).

He could have encountered the work of Itten, Klee, Kandinsky, and a student of Feininger, Werner Gilles (1894–1961), all mystically inclined expressionists.

1920

Nov. 20, 1920: Paula’s brother Albert Schwabacher (Landsberg an der Warthe 1856) dies in Hamburg.

1921

Aug. 28, 1921, Berlin, Wilmersdorf: Alexander Herman Wilhelm Wolpe born, son of Beatrice Engers & Johann Wolpe. (Murdered in Auschwitz, 1943.)

1922

May 9, 1922: Leon’s cousin Sonya (Sanya/Sauja) Isaac Schwabacher and his wife, Wilma, in New York.

1923

Sept. 17/27: Magical diaries of AC. Tunisia 1923: “Dictated (earlier) story of Kennedy”; on masturbation and guilt feelings.

1924

March 3, 1924: “Catherine Engers, wife of well-known German artist, is in America to arrange for animal hunting expedition in Africa, for which she will make motion pictures” (The Evening News from Harrisburg Pennsylvania, p. 20).

March 20, 1924: Catherine (Engers) Reilly arrives in Plymouth, coming from New York; ship: America. Stays in Hyde Park Hotel, with her youngest brother J. R. Reilly (student, 21, USA). Country of last permanent residence: Germany.

Between March and Oct. 1924: The Engers family moves to France.

Engers sees AC again in Paris, Hotel Blois, 50 Rue Vavin.

Oct 12, 1924: Leon arrives in the United Kingdom, coming from Cape Town. Last permanent residence: France.

1925

Beatrice Engers & Johann Wolpe move from Berlin to Paris; banker Wolpe, together with a certain Fritz Klekottka (Klikottka?) accused of swindle.

March 22, 1925, Sunday Times Sydney NSW: “Lady Doughty is down at San Remo with Mrs. Engers Kennedy the wife of the best known among the rising generation of Dutch painters”[!].

1926

June 18, 1926, Paris: Liliane born, daughter of Beatrice Engers & Johann Wolpe. (Murdered in Auschwitz 1942.)

Aug. 1926: AC in Paris, out of trouble thanks to Leon Engers.

Aug. 29, 1926, Sunday Times Sydney NSW: Australians in Paris, dinner party by Mrs. Borsdorff, attended by “Mr. and Mrs. Engers Kennedy.”

1927

April 25, 1927 Les Mondanités: “Mrs. Engers Kennedy” attends a party of Baron de Pilis (in Laas-Sauveterre, Pyrenees).

1928

Oct. 27, 1928: Leon Engers arrives in New York (intending to stay for 6 months) coming from Paris.

Address: 44 Wall Street. Catherine’s address in Paris: 12 Rue Victor-Considérant (nearby the Montparnasse cemetery; posh studio building, where Lee Miller lived in the 1930s, Simone de Beauvoir in the 1950s). Note: in the United States he drops “Kennedy.”

1929

Nov. 15, 1929: Catherine Reilly arrives in New York, coming from Paris. Ship: Rochambeau.

1931

Feb. 10, 1931: Petitions for naturalization. Catherine Reilly applies for U.S. citizenship (her nationality, by marriage (?): Dutch). Resides at 351 W. 28th St., N.Y.

Oct. 11, 1931: AC in Berlin, mentions the Schiffers as friends of Engers’s brother-in-law (in Tobias Churton, Aleister Crowley: The Beast in Berlin, 2014, chapter: “Porza!”).

1934

Naturalization. Paula Schwabacher widow of Mozes Engers, born Odessa March 24/April 5, 1867, living in Paris, applies for Dutch citizenship.

1935

Johann Wolpe in Paris, tries to sell forged shares.

1935–1940

Leon’s and Catherine’s residence: 35 Carlton Avenue, Port Washington, North Hampstead, Nassau (N.Y.). Note: built in 1936.

1940 U.S. Federal Census: School or college: Highest grade completed: College, 1st year (Catherine); College 4th year (Leon). Note: in the 1940s Leon becomes Dr. Engers (Ph.D. University of Berlin). Hard to check during the war and afterward. Did he make it up . . . ?

1937

Federal Art Show at Woodstock: Leon Engers shows On the threshold of eternity.

July 14, 1937: Leon’s cousin Henri Schwabacher in New York.

1938

Beatrice Engers & husband Wolpe in Den Haag, Feb. 3–Aug. 27. Aug. 27, 1938, to Ostend.

Sept. 26, 1938: Paula Schwabacher in Den Haag, at Wolpe’s place, Laan van Meerdervoort 377.

1939

Jan. 31, 1939: Naturalization of Leon Engers, residing at: 35 Carlton Ave., Pt. Washington, L.I.

Feb. 17, 1939, divorce Beatrice and Johann Wolpe.

Beatrice Engers and family in Ostend.

1940

Address of Leon and Catherine: 35 Carlton Avenue, North Hempstead Town, Nassau, N.Y.

Artist: portraits, teacher.

Hans (John) Max Joachim Wolpe (1918–1963) attended school in Brussels; escaped from a camp in Berlin and joined the French underground; guided the Canadian army into Calais 1944. Married Vera A. Wendel (Austria 1933–Sonoma 1973) in 1954. Divorced 1962, shot himself May 1, 1963.

1941 (ca.)

Leon Engers starts teaching on the art faculty of Temple University, Philadelphia. Templar Yearbook, 1944.

1942

WWII Draft registration cards 1942: Simeon Leon Engers. Occupation: Temple University. Residence: Port Washington (Catherine, 35 Carlton Ave.). Place of employment: Tyler School of Fine Arts, Elkins Park, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania). Established 1935 (tyler@temple.edu).

Beatrice Engers and family deported from Mechelen to Auschwitz.

1947

Bulletin Temple University 1947: Leon Engers, “Instructor in painting.”

1949

Templar Yearbook (class of 1949): “Dr. Leon Engers, Instructor in Painting, received his Ph.D. at the University of Berlin. Dr. Engers who has works on exhibit here and abroad, studied at the Sorbonne, Paris, the Académie Julian, Paris, and the Bauhaus, Weimar, Germany. He was formerly a pupil of Lyonel Feininger.”

1949–1958

Leon Engers at Bradley University (Kaczynsky).

Dr. Leon Engers, formerly of Temple University will teach painting and art history, replacing George Kachergis (College Art Journal 1949).

1950

Leon Engers, Portrait of Edgar C. Foster, 1950. (Associate professor of art, Bradley University. President of the Friends of the Bradley Library (1863–1951).

1953

Sept.: Dr. Leon Engers starts teaching at Bradley University in Peoria (Illinois), after eight[?] years on the art faculty of Temple University in Philadelphia (Galesbury Register-Mail from Galesbury Illinois, Sept. 22, 1953, p. 6).

Id., Sept. 25, Engers: “A portrait should have: 1. analytical resemblance; 2. psychological insight; 3. historical implication such as observing the dress, gestures, hair styles of the period; and 4. formal values that any great work of art should have, such as color and design.”

1955 (ca.?)

Director of the Art Department.

Note: student/assistant: August Schmitz (info@augustschmitz.com).

(Students: Doug Lew, Ted Kurahara, Emily B. Johnson.)

1959

Feb. 4, 1959: Catherine Engers Reilly dies. (New York Times, Feb. 6, 1959, 25 “Deaths.”)

Her brothers: John G. & Joseph R. Reilly; sister: Jennie C. Schmidt.

1964

Leon Engers exhibits at Bradley Gallery 20.

1965

Leon Engers exhibits at Fulton Gallery, New York. Self-portrait in Arts Magazine 40 (1965), p. 60.

1970

July 6, 1970: Leon Engers dies, Port Washington, Nassau (N.Y.) in his eightieth year. Funeral private. (New York Times, July 7, 1970.)

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Fig. A1.2. Leon Engers exhibits at Fulton Gallery, New York; self-portrait in Arts Magazine 40 (1965), p. 60. (image courtesy of Frank van Lamoen)