Laurence Chalfant Stevens Sickman (1907–1988) was an American academic,art historian,sinologist and Director of theNelson-Atkins Museum of Art inKansas City.[1]
A native of Denver, Colorado, Sickman became interested in Japanese and Chinese art while in high school.[2] In 1930, he earned a degree in the field at Harvard, where he also became fluent in Chinese.[1] He traveled throughout China under the newly formedHarvard-Yenching Fellowship,[3] purchasing Chinese paintings, sculpture and furniture for collection and study at the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of the Nelson-Atkins Museum. He traveled on a scholarship to China, where he metLangdon Warner, his former Harvard professor and one of the trustees of the Nelson museum, which was being established. Warner, who had been appointed to build a collection for the museum, initially tutored Sickman. Sickman was later given the responsibility of buying works on his own by means of a $11 million donation byKansas City Star founderWilliam Rockhill Nelson.[1]
In 1931, Sickman joined the staff of theNelson-Atkins Museum of Art.[3] In 1935, he became the curator of Oriental Art at the museum. His museum curatorial career was interrupted by military service in the Second World War.[1]
In 1973, Sickman was awarded theCharles Lang Freer Medal.[4]
Sickman's war service took him toTokyo during theoccupation of Japan where he served as one of the "Monuments Men" under[3] GeneralDouglas MacArthur'sMonuments, Fine Arts, and Archives (MFAA) section. Among those serving with Sickman in Tokyo wereSherman Lee[5] andPatrick Lennox Tierney.[6]
At war's end, he returned to the Nelson-Atkins museum, where he was director from 1953 through 1977.[1]
In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about Laurence Sickman,OCLC/WorldCat encompasses roughly 50+ works in 90+ publications in four languages and in 3,000+ library holdings.[7]
{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)