Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Archives
Margaret R. and Robert M. Freeman LibraryCourtney Yevich Tkacz, VMFA Archivist
The collection is subject to all copyright laws. Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright, beyond that allowed by fair use, requires the researcher to obtain permission of copyright holders.
The collection is open for research.
This collection was donated to the VMFA Archives' in June 2006 by Parker Agelasto, great grand-nephew of Michael Agelasto.
T. Catesby Jones Personal Papers (SC-06). Gift of the Agelasto Family. VMFA Archives, Richmond, Virginia.
Thomas "T." Catesby Jones was born in Petersburg, Virginia in 1880, the third son of Walter Nelson Jones, owner of one of the city's most prominent mills. After studying at Hampden-Sydney College, Princeton University, and the University of Virginia, Jones graduated with his law degree in 1902 and shortly moved to Norfolk to set up a law practice. In 1911, he moved to New York City to take a job at the firm of Harrington, Bigham, and Englar, where he worked for the rest of his life and established an international reputation in maritime law. In addition, Jones spent twenty years amassing a renowned collection of modern French art and prints, later donated to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and the University of Virginia.
Michael "Mickey" Alexander Agelasto was born in Syros, Greece in 1869 and died in Norfolk, Virginia in 1949. He attended Johns Hopkins University and graduated from Columbia University in 1891, where he played varsity tennis and then semi-professional for several years afterwards. He eventually settled in Norfolk, and worked in the family business as a cotton broker. Agelasto's extended family lived throughout the world and he travelled frequently to England, France, Greece, Italy, and Egypt. In 1916, Agelasto was appointed Greek Consul to the Port of Norfolk and had diplomatic responsibility for receiving all Greek vessels.
It is believed that Jones and Agelasto met professionally in Norfolk and subsequently became lifelong friends. Both men had an interest in modern art, and were members of the Museum of Modern Art from its earliest days. Agelasto continued his friendship with Jones' widow, Louisa Brooke Jones, after Catesby's death in 1946.
Source: Matisse, Picasso, and Modern Art in Paris
Source: Email exchange between Courtney Yevich Tkacz and Parker Agelasto, March 2011
The collection's inclusive dates are 1946-1949. The collection is comprised of correspondence, postcards, newspaper clippings, and one photograph.
The collection is organized into two series, and items are arranged chronologically within each series. Items with no date are placed at the end at each series.
This series is comprised of correspondence between Louisa and Agelasto. The January 1949 letter includes a photograph of the monument designed by Jacques Lipchitz for Catesby's grave in Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg, Virginia. The April 1949 letter details Louisa's recent visit to Charlottesville, Virginia for the opening of the exhibition of Catesby's collection there.
This series is comprised of newspaper clippings about Jones and his collection.