Dear Friends of Diego,
It is with deep regret that I report that Julia
Bergman, my Diego Rivera research partner, passed away peacefully on Monday
January 9th after a long struggle with chronic health issues.
I had already been at City College for 18 years when I
first met her. As she put it, we were “joined at the hip” for the next 20
years. She was the real deal. As a librarian she helped and mentored many
people. As an advocate for City College, she was ferocious. As an integral
member of the Central Asia
institute, she lovingly created girl’s schools and libraries high in the
Karakorum Mountains of northern Pakistan. She co-wrote the history of City
College. It’s not often you have a hero, who also calls you friend. Our
telepathy and synchronicity were manifest. People would ask, “How did you do
that?” We had enough sense not to take credit. The cosmos loved us and we just
had to stay out of the way.
As the archivist for the Diego Rivera Mural Project,
she created a collection of this unique part of Diego Rivera’s life, which is
unparalleled. Scholars come from all over to utilize it. When we first got
together, I would discover a new insight and want to hoard it, like a squirrel
with an acorn. “No,” said the librarian, “we must share it.” She, of course,
was right. Putting it out there brought multiple rewards.
She was excited about our planned trip next month to
Mexico City, where we had gone multiple times. On our first visit many years
ago, she taught me how to drink Tequila. On that visit we went to Teotihuacan,
the vast complex outside Mexico City. We hired a driver in a van to take us. He
asked if he could bring his nephew. “Of course.” Before the nephew and I
sprinted to the top of the Pyramid of the Sun, she said, “Don’t wait on me. I’m
built for comfort, not speed!” After ½ an hour at the top, just as we were
about to descend, here came Julia over the top. Attached are pictures of the
pyramid and Julia and me on top of the world.
For the last couple of years, we had been very much
aware of our mortality as we became the last two working members of the Diego
Rivera Mural Project. We became very active in “institutionalizing the
project, before we were institutionalized.” To that end last semester she gave
up the Chair of the CCSF Works of Art Committee she had held for 20 years. The
amount of good done for the College’s art collection during her tenure is
well-documented. Attached is a picture of Julia and me at the Art Deco Society
of California’s Preservation Ball, where we were honored with the 2015 Michael
Crowe Preservation Award.
Last summer Julia and I took a long-awaited trip to
Canada to pore over the “lost“ Diego Rivera papers we had found after a 15 year
search. It took us an additional 3 years to find a window around our mutual
caregiving responsibilities. She is the only person in the world I would have
trusted to read half of the 2000 page collection. We had a very successful
trip. Locked in a windowless room in the bowels of a museum, we would tell each
other, “Listen to this” and “Oh, that’s good!” On our last brightly lit day at
an outdoor café with majestic mountains about us, we drank a toast: “To our
friendship and to not leading a diminished life.” I rejoice in her life, well
and generously lived.
[We are planning a Celebration of Julia’s Life
on Saturday Feb. 25, 2017 at 1 p.m. at City College with more details to follow
as we firm it up.]
Abrazos,
Will
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