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Elizabeth Tashjian, artist and founder of nut museum, dies at age 94

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  • Elizabeth Tashjian, artist and founder of nut museum, dies at age 94

    Stamford Advocate, CT
    Jan 30 2007


    Elizabeth Tashjian, artist and founder of nut museum, dies at age 94


    Associated Press
    Published January 30 2007


    OLD SAYBROOK, Conn. -- Elizabeth Tashjian, the famed "Nut Lady,"
    whose passion for nuts became her life's work in her art and drove
    her to establish a nut museum in her home, has died. She was 94.

    Tashjian died Sunday at an Old Saybrook nursing home, where she had
    spent the last five years.


    A classically trained artist, the diminutive Tashjian painted more
    than 100 works and sculpted about dozen other pieces, but it was in
    the nut that she clearly found her muse. It was that artwork that
    adorned her museum.

    "I use the nut form to inspire my artwork and thinking philosophy,"
    Tashjian said in a 2002 interview with The Associated Press. "I don't
    want my museum to be taken as a joke."

    The collection, now housed at Connecticut College, includes metal
    sculptures, a 35-pound coco de mer, nut masks, paintings and nuts.
    There are also video clips from her four appearances on the Tonight
    Show with Johnny Carson, and many newspaper clippings chronicling the
    offbeat museum.

    Tashjian was the subject of "In a Nutshell," a documentary by
    independent filmmaker Don Bernier.

    The only child of aristocratic Armenian immigrants, Tashjian studied
    at the National Academy of Design in New York City and had a studio
    in Carnegie Hall. She moved with her family to Old Lyme in 1950.

    She was heavily in debt near the end of her life and her home was
    eventually sold in 2003 to pay her creditors. With no surviving
    family, a conservator was appointed to oversee her and her estate.

    She founded the museum in 1972 in her 17-room East Lyme home. She
    would educate visitors on different kinds of nuts. Then she would try
    on masks that represented each nut, and quiz each visitor on what
    they learned.

    At first, admission to the museum was one nut. Tashjian later raised
    it to $3 and one nut.

    She had big designs for her beloved museum, even as she was confined
    to the nursing home.

    "I want to build a nut theme park," she said in the 2002 interview.
    "One that will put Disneyland to shame."

    A memorial service is pending.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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