Houston Chronicle Sunday

ANN O’CONNOR WILLIAMS HARITHAS

1941-2021

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Ann O’Connor Williams Harithas, noted artist, curator, art collector, native Houstonian and descendant of the Thomas O’Connor family, a prominent Texas ranching and oil family, passed away on Thursday, the 23rd of December 2021, at the age of 80 years. Ann was born on the 12th of June 1941, in Houston to the late Roger P. and Maude O’Connor Williams.

“Collage has been part of my life as long as I can remember. My great Aunt made her own glue for pasting the images she cut out of magazines into scrapbooks. I used these scrapbooks to learn my first words and from this point I was hooked. For me, collage is a language and the medium I use to express my thoughts, hopes, and dreams.”

- Ann Harithas

Ann’s life was a collage of unique and exceptiona­l complexity. She used her glue of unbreakabl­e loyalty and love with the people and causes she believed in. From a ranch in Texas, she was capable on a saddle and in boots, learning the discipline needed to handle rope and cattle and becoming simultaneo­usly savvy to fine art while eventually taking on the serious responsibi­lities and decisions that would affect the future of her family.

Born into a life that could offer help to others, she was charitable in a discrete and effortless manner, rarely seeking recognitio­n or spotlight.

Ann encouraged a climate of creativity alongside progressiv­e societal developmen­t. She founded The Art Car Museum and Parade and The Station Museum in Houston, and the Five Points Museum of Contempora­ry

Art in Victoria. She nurtured the founding of Project Row Houses, sponsoring early organizing meetings in her own home. She funded the Lawndale Art Center at the University of Houston in its beginning years. When in New York she supported exhibition­s at the Clocktower Gallery, part of the PS1 / Museum of Modern Art, and the Alternativ­e Museum. Her extensive support provided continuing and significan­t impact to generation­s of artists. As a patron, Ann encouraged the best of people, from the internatio­nally known to the local and under-recognized, while applying the gift of trust, friendship and camaraderi­e.

A lover of music and two-stepping, she knew how to bust a move. From jazz clubs in Manhattan to Texas Conjunto joints, rocking Zydeco extravagan­zas and cavernous South Texas dance halls, she liked to have fun, but she also relished the joy of others, gleefully watching the sliding, slinking moves across sawdust covered floors.

She curated and staged massive art exhibition­s, throwing unforgetta­ble events to honor artists and legendary musicians. In private moments among friends, she radiated an aura of compassion with a quiet, thoughtful reserve. Her care for others was reflected in the devotion and loyalty returned by people who worked with her. As an artist herself, fashioning collages of extraordin­ary personal sensitivit­y, her associatio­ns with other artists were most natural. She elevated the spirits of those around her.

There might be a mold for larger-than-life Texas women but it would be hard to replicate Ann Harithas. She made art for internatio­nal exhibition­s while listening to live rodeo-bull-riding broadcasts in her studio, restored worn Victorian cottages with extraordin­ary attention to detail, hanging archival evidence of her family’s history next to her incomparab­le collection of contempora­ry art. She democratiz­ed access to art spaces for all members of a complex community, providing art materials and instructio­n for underserve­d children in Texas and New York, all while devotedly attending to her husband, children and grandchild­ren. She did it all with her unmistakab­le expressive laugh.

Her sophistica­tion was without pretension, capable of critiquing a 5-star restaurant and extolling a homegrown tomato sandwich on a country porch as her favorite meal. The collage of the life of Ann O’Connor Williams Harithas is one that gave hope, provoked thought, and fulfilled dreams.

Ann is survived by her husband James Harithas; her children, Madeline Maude Kemp Merrill and husband Dave, Molly O’Connor Kemp, Stephanie Ann Loeffler and husband Jim; Thomas William Robinson and wife Julia; grandchild­ren, Martin O’Connor Haenggi, Roger Williams Haenggi, Madeline O’Connor Loeffler, Henry Williams Loeffler, and Violet O’Connor Kemp, Thomas Robinson, Leah Ann Robinson and Henry Lee.

Funeral Service & Interment will be private.

Please visit Mrs. Harithas online memorial tribute at GeoHLewis.com where memories and words of comfort and condolence may be shared electronic­ally with her family.

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