Cover photo for Louise Mccagg's Obituary
Louise Mccagg Profile Photo
1936 Louise 2020

Louise Mccagg

July 22, 1936 — November 26, 2020

Louise Heublein McCagg—artist, philanthropist, feminist, and mother—died peacefully, surrounded by her family, on November 26, 2020, after a heroic, 20-year struggle against Parkinson’s Disease.

Louise was born in Hartford, Connecticut, on July 22, 1936, to Dorothy Duncan Whitney and Dr. Gilbert Whipple Heublein. She attended Renbrook School and Dana Hall School before moving to New York City. There she received her B.A. in English Literature from Barnard College in 1959 and studied printmaking and painting at The Arts Students League. She met and married William Ogden McCagg, Jr., during this time.

The McCaggs moved to East Lansing, Michigan, when Bill began his tenure at Michigan State University as a Professor of East European history. While raising their two daughters, Louise earned her M.F.A. in Sculpture from Michigan State University, graduating in 1971. As an aside, she was the first woman allowed to "pour" in the Sculpture department at MSU. That is metal, not tea!

She collaborated with friends and artists in building two Geodesic domes, one of which would serve as her studio and foundry. She participated in the East Lansing artist community and actively showed her work. Her sculptured pillar of "art supporters" stands in East Lansing, Michigan, as does “Beatrice” at Michigan State University’s Wharton Center. Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Louise used her art and her voice to champion a variety of Civil Rights causes.

Her husband's work as a scholar of East European history included a number of sabbaticals that allowed the couple to live for extended periods in Europe, particularly Hungary. While living in Budapest—where Bill, an American and non-Jew, was the first scholar to be allowed into the Hungarian archives where he researched his books, including The Habsburg Jews—Louise and Bill developed lifelong friendships with the experimental artists and intellectuals of the time, not least Miklos Erdely and members of the avant guard theatre group, later known in New York as Squat Theater. Louise’s work was deeply influenced by her Hungarian and East European friends, some of whom the McCaggs championed and helped to relocate to the United States.

When Louise was in her fifties, she and her husband returned to New York City where Louise continued her career and became a member of the A.I.R. gallery. Louise exhibited widely, both in the United States and internationally. She also collaborated with a new generation of Hungarians on many projects, one of them being part of the Hungarian Pavilion of the 2009 Venice Biennale.

In her work, Louise consistently fused her interest in a formal, figurative sculptural aesthetic with her own experience and relationships, bringing together both rigorous artistic structure and intimate, personal experience. Over decades, and around the world, she cast face masks of those important to her and synthesized them into larger visual works that told both a deeply personal, self-empowered narrative and, simultaneously, a larger, archetypal one: that we are all one, no matter who we are or where we come from.

Intellectually curious, always creating, ever courageous, Louise McCagg was herself a force of nature. As the Parkinson’s Disease progressed, Louise fought her body’s decline. Her endurance and refusal to stop working vividly demonstrated her deep love of life and evoked the provocative beauty of her life’s creations. With her wildly generous spirit and love of humanity, Louise enriched the lives of hundreds of people.

When the coronavirus struck, she left her beloved New York City to live at the home of one of her daughters in New Hampshire, where Louise was living at the time of her death.

Louise is survived by her two daughters, Alexandra (Xanda) McCagg, and her fiancé Timothy S. Quinn, and Dorothy (Tory) McCagg and her husband Carl A. Querfurth, as well as many beloved extended family members. Due to the pandemic, there will not be an in-person gathering at this time.

If you would like to honor Louise, please consider a donation to A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY (www.airgallery.org) or to an organization that is working to find a cure for, or that supports people who have, Parkinson’s Disease.

To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Louise Mccagg, please visit our flower store.

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