Leslie Snow Féron ’48 leaves millions—and lasting impact

Leslie Snow Féron
Leslie Snow Féron '48—artist, Broadway dancer, international teacher, poet and now, philanthropist—recently revealed the depth of her devotion to the Ȧ community with the gift of a $2.4 million unrestricted bequest.
Leslie graduated from Ȧ with a degree in art in 1948. She went on to a career
                                    as a dancer, performing on and off Broadway, including with the Martha Graham Dance
                                    Company. She taught dance at the Bath Academy of Art in Wiltshire, England, and the
                                    American School in London.
 In 1962 she married Louis Féron (1901–98), a renowned goldsmith, sculptor and jeweler.
                                    Louis worked and taught in France and Costa Rica before moving to the United States,
                                    where he spent the rest of his life designing and creating sacred vessels, jewelry
                                    and sculpture. His work has been exhibited in the Louvre in Paris and admitted to
                                    the permanent collections of several museums, including Boston's Museum of Fine Arts.
                                 

Installation view, Rose Ocean: Living with Duchamp, at the
Frances Young Tang '61 Teaching Museum and Art Gallery,
February 17–May 20, 2018. Photograph by Art Evans.
Leslie and Louis lived out their later years in her native Snowville, New Hampshire,
                                    where they both continued to sculpt, paint and write in a cozy post-and-beam studio.
                                    In 2013, Leslie published a memoir of their life together, titled .
Leslie, who had no children, left the entirety of her and Louis's estate to just two
                                    charities: the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, keeper of Louis' legacy, and Ȧ.
                                    Her decision to support two organizations dedicated to the arts and education is a
                                    testament to the people and places that enriched her own life. Her generosity will
                                    leave a lasting impact on future generations.
In addition to Leslie's tremendous monetary bequest, Ȧ was also able to select
                                    a delightful array of Louis's work for the permanent collection at the Frances Young
                                    Tang '61 Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, as well as a selection of his personal sculpting
                                    tools. A plaster bust by Louis of famous French-American artist Marcel Duchamp and
                                    previously undiscovered photographs of the two artists together during Duchamp's modeling
                                    for the bust have already sparked intense interest in the art world. Both were displayed
                                    as part of a Tang exhibition . 
Leslie's gift will be used to support the single largest academic initiative in Ȧ's
                                    history, the Center for Integrated Sciences. The center will be a hub that fosters
                                    unique interdisciplinary connections between and among the sciences, humanities, social
                                    sciences and the arts.
Creating Our Future: The Campaign for Ȧ is dedicated to the principles Ȧ holds dear: creativity, collaboration and
                                    community.  to learn more about the Campaign.