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Art, Tennis & Serendipity: "The greatest female tennis player in history"?

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  • Art, Tennis & Serendipity: "The greatest female tennis player in history"?

    "The greatest female tennis player in history", winner of 31 Grand Slam tournaments, including 8 Wimbledon singles titles, and beat the eighth-ranked US male player in an exhibition.
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    We were visiting. a display of artwork at SFMOMA by Mexican Diego Rivera, who did much of his more recognizable work while living in the SF Bay Area, when tennis surprisingly intruded.
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    One of Rivera's murals, called the Allegory of California (image above) was done under a commission for the Pacific Stock exchange. We were looking at preliminary art for the mural, where the model was described as a famous tennis player. Serendipitously, a woman touring the art nearby works at the stock exchange and said part of her job is explaining the mural to VIP visitors. She added some "color commentary"
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    The model, Helen Wills or Helen Wills Moody, was not only a great tennis player -- she won 31 Grand Slam tournaments -- but apparently was a 20s flapper with a Kardashian-level of public notoriety.
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    New York Times from 1928: Helen Wills Is Queen of Her Tennis World
    There are a few champions in the realm of sport who so stand out above his or her rivals as does Miss Helen Wills of Berkeley Cal., winner of every major title in women’s lawn tennis and undisputed empress of the courts. Of all the figures whose deeds in sports — of whatever kind — are emblazoned across the pages of the press, this 23-year-old winner of the French, English and American championships stands alone as the overwhelming favorite to win every time she appears. She is so much a favorite as to make any wagering on the outcome of her matches out of the question.

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    Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Wills
    Wills was the first American woman athlete to become a global celebrity, making friends with royalty and film stars despite her preference for staying out of the limelight. She was admired for her graceful physique and for her fluid motion. She was part of a new tennis fashion, playing in knee-length pleated skirts rather than the longer ones of her predecessors, and was known for wearing her hallmark white visor. Unusually, she practiced against men to hone her craft, and she played a relentless predominantly baseline game, wearing down her female opponents with power and accuracy. In February 1926 she played a high-profile and widely publicised match against Suzanne Lenglen which was called the Match of the Century.



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    It was widely rumored that she and Rivera had an affair, which Wills vehemently denied. But our serendipitous tour guide told us, "Given how much Rivera fooled around, yeah, they had an affair."
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    Here is a preliminary work for the mural, and this is a wikipedia write up of Wills: "She was said to be "arguably the most dominant tennis player of the 20th century", and has been called by some (including Jack Kramer, Harry Hopman, Mercer Beasley, Don Budge, and AP News) the greatest female player in history."
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    There'll always be serendipity involved in discovery. -- Jeff Bezos

    What people call serendipity sometimes is just having your eyes open. -- Jose Manuel Barroso
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    The concept of serendipity often crops up in research. Serendipity is the faculty or phenomenon of finding valuable or agreeable things that were not being sought. I believe that all researchers can be serendipitous. -- Akira Suzuki
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    The craftless anarchy of the Beat poets on the one hand, and the extreme control of Henry James on the other, suggest that for most human beings, just as both freedom and discipline are necessary in life, serendipity and design must coexist in a work to make it readable. -- Mark Helprin
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    You do not have permission to view this gallery.
    This gallery has 4 photos.
    Last edited by jimlosaltos; 04-07-2023, 08:54 AM.

  • #2
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    Great story and intrigue of a possible love affair with the infamous Diago Rivera and Helen Wills Moody. Here is a mural in the Detroit Art Museum. It is his rendering of the Ford Rouge Plant where I worked in a Quality Control environment for twenty-five years or so. This infernal place (The Rouge Plant) was also the subject of some chapters in Ferdinand Celine's "Journey to the End of the Night" which has and always will be one of my favorite novels of all time. It seems that somehow Celine's journey took him from deserting the French army in WWI to Africa then on to New York and then to Detroit. His vivid description of life in Detroit back in the twenties ground down the soul in a man as he became a part of the machine. The beast.

    "Journey" became the subject of a Jim Morrison song "End of the Night" as Morrison was also a huge fan of Celine's. His follow up novel "Death on the Installment Plan" is equally some of the best literature ever. So serenditify. Connect the dots. These are must reads for any aspiring tennis coach. I wonder if Rivera dabbled in some tennis or if his curiousity of the game was satisfied by osmosis.
    don_budge
    Performance Analysthttps://www.tennisplayer.net/bulleti...ilies/cool.png

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    • #3
      Originally posted by don_budge View Post
      image.png

      Great story and intrigue of a possible love affair with the infamous Diago Rivera and Helen Wills Moody. Here is a mural in the Detroit Art Museum. It is his rendering of the Ford Rouge Plant where I worked in a Quality Control environment for twenty-five years or so. This infernal place (The Rouge Plant) was also the subject of some chapters in Ferdinand Celine's "Journey to the End of the Night" which has and always will be one of my favorite novels of all time. It seems that somehow Celine's journey took him from deserting the French army in WWI to Africa then on to New York and then to Detroit. His vivid description of life in Detroit back in the twenties ground down the soul in a man as he became a part of the machine. The beast.

      "Journey" became the subject of a Jim Morrison song "End of the Night" as Morrison was also a huge fan of Celine's. His follow up novel "Death on the Installment Plan" is equally some of the best literature ever. So serenditify. Connect the dots. These are must reads for any aspiring tennis coach. I wonder if Rivera dabbled in some tennis or if his curiousity of the game was satisfied by osmosis.
      Wow. Rivera > Moody > Celine > The Doors cultural synthesis.

      I was not familiar with the Detroit mural.

      Here are some photos of the Diego Rivera exhibit: https://photos.app.goo.gl/jipaNr5xAapzpxrT6

      In particular, here is a VR image that allows one to pan and scroll (Zoom In) through the entire "Pan American Unity" mural. Click once or twice to get "curled arrow" icon in middle of screen. Click that to enter. Then move around in the image with your cursor, or scroll up or down on your mouse to enlarge portions.


      This 1,683 sq ft 30-ton mural, commissioned as part of the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1940, was taken apart, moved to the lobby of the SF MOMA and painstakingly reassembled.

      Characters include Gen. Washington, President Lincoln, Charlie Chaplin as Hitler, Thomas Edison, Leon Trotsky (Rivera's estranged friend), Simon Bolivar, Nezahualcoyotl (poet, inventor and ruler of Texoco), Quetzalcoatl (plumed serpent and Aztec deity) & Frida Kahlo the artist's wife (lower right of second image). Kahlo was an accomplished artist in her own right, whose reputation has perhaps exceeded her husband's in recent years. A SF street is named for her.
      Last edited by jimlosaltos; 04-08-2023, 11:16 AM.

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