Amherst Middle School is looking for Alumni to be Career Day Presenters on Wednesday, December 6, 2023.
If you are interested, read the attached letter from the Amherst Middle School Career Fair Committee by clicking here. Please ignore the deadline date on the letter. More participants are needed.
Faculty and staff are always excited to have Alumni share their experiences with students.
Jeffrey M. Genrich, who managed his family’s hotels in Amherst, Blasdell and the U.S. Virgin Islands, died unexpectedly Sept. 18 in Albuquerque, N.M., where he had gone to attend a funeral. He was 72.
Born in Buffalo, the youngest of four children, he was a grandson of J. Harold Genrich, a builder who developed a large part of Amherst. His father, Willard A. Genrich, was an attorney, developer and chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents. He grew up on Getzville Road in Snyder, where his family kept horses. He and his sisters won prizes in horse shows.
He attended Smallwood Elementary School, graduated in 1968 from Amherst Central High School and went on to complete a bachelor’s degree from Hobart College, where he was a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. He later earned certification from the Nolan School of Hotel Administration at Cornell University.
Mr. Genrich managed the Best Western Regency Hotel in Blasdell from 1980 until it closed in 1990 and regularly hosted Buffalo Bills players there. He then was manager of the landmark Lord Amherst Hotel in Snyder, designed for his family by Duane Lyman, the dean of Western New York architecture, and opened in 1962.
He also was manager of the Holger Danske Hotel, which his father helped build in 1970 on the harborfront in Christiansted on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
He became president of the two hotels following the death of his father in 1999. He continued managing the Lord Amherst, now the Reikart House, until it was sold in 2011. Until he retired in 2017, he commuted several times a year to oversee operations in St. Croix.
He had been a Buffalo Bills season ticket holder since his father bought him one for the team’s first season in 1960. Also a fan of Broadway musicals since he was a boy, he was a longtime supporter of Shea’s Performing Arts Center.
He and his wife, the former Heather Anne Pratt, a Californian transplanted to St. Croix, met on the pool deck of the Holger Danske. Survivors also include a step-daughter, Adia Fenn; two sisters, Willa Long and Ellen Rusling; and a brother, Willard Jr.
Walter R. Garver, Artist, age 96, died Friday, September 8, 2023 at Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital. He was the son of Walter Otto Garver and Victoria Constance Garver (nee Buckiewicz). He was preceded in death by his loving wife of 60 years, Jane Mary (nee Swanz), 2017, his beloved sister Joan Shanahan, 2022, and her husband William, 2019. Survived by nephews David Richard (Doris) and William Lawrence (Susan) Shanahan. He has extended family in Lockport, Tonawanda, Ithaca and Rochester NY.
Born in Medina, NY, Walter graduated from Batavia High School in 1946, and enlisted in the Navy in his senior year. When the war ended in 1948, Walter enlisted in the Air National Guard. and served in active duty stationed at Niagara Falls Air Base through the early 50’s, as a meteorologist. His interest in cataloging the weather remained persistent throughout his life. Walter also studied at the Albright Art School 1946 -1950 and worked as an illustrator from 1948-1958. He had envisioned a career as an illustrator for magazines such as Collier’s but focused his concentration on painting from his own perspective. In 1951, at age 23, he won first prize for oil painting in the annual Western New York Art Exhibition, the youngest artist ever to win the award at the time. He also won Best in Show the next year. Walter continued his quest for knowledge and graduated from the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1955, and later returned to attain his Teaching Certificate in 1958. He taught Art history, Drawing, Painting, and Photography from 1958 to 1985 at Amherst High School. Former students would often reach out to thank him for the foundational guidance he provided in propelling their careers in art and appreciation of the visual arts. His work has been described as photorealistic, but Walter considered it more a combination of abstract principles and sometimes surrealistic interpretations of realism. He said, each subject made its own demands on his approach. Portraiture made different demands than landscapes or still life paintings. Walter was always interested in projecting a sense of fantasy in his work. He was influenced by the work of Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth as well as other well-respected painters. At one point he was advised not to become an artist by Charles Burchfield because it would be hard to make a living. Nevertheless, Walter was a prolific artist exhibiting constantly throughout his career. Upon his retirement, Walter worked as a contributing editor for Artist’s Magazine and Watercolor Magic Magazine. He fulfilled a long held desire to be a writer by publishing an historical novel that accurately reflected his research of the interactions of Native American and European cultures. Walter’s book titled, Children of the Forest, was published in 2009. Walter has received numerous honors for his work. He had one man shows at the Albright Knox Art Gallery, the Chautauqua Art Gallery, Hall of Art in New York City and the More-Rubin Gallery in Buffalo. His works have also been included in group shows with the Buffalo Society of Artists, winning the Gold Medal in 1967 and 1971, the Cooperstown Art Association, winning the Grand Prize in 1973 and 1975 and the Allied Artists Annual Exhibition, winning the Gilmore and Romans Memorial Award in 1994, among several others. Walter’s professional memberships included the Allied Artists of America, Audubon Artists, Buffalo Society of Artists, Copley Society of Boston and the National Watercolor Society. His paintings are in the collections of the Arnot Museum in Elmira, NY, the Butler Institute in Youngstown, OH, the Minnesota Museum and the Burchfield Penney Art Center. Walter will be laid to rest in Mount Calvary Cemetery, on September 30th at 10:45am.
Julie Lewitzky, 81, artist renowned for her popular portrayals of local homes
βIt all started because I did someoneβs house as a thank you, and he showed it to our local Realtor,β Julie Lewitzky told The Buffalo News in 1995. βShe hired me to do one every time she sold a house.β
Her pen-and-ink line drawings of homes locally and elsewhere became the foundation for a flood of images that made her one of the areaβs most visible artists in the 1970s and 1980s.
In a feature article about Ms. Lewitzky in 1984, News reporter Karen Brady observed: βThere probably are few Buffalonians who have not seen Julieβs work β on cards, posters, T-shirts, tote bags, postcards and more.β
Her designs graced the pages of the Parkside Community Associationβs calendars for more than 40 years. She created a poster for the Buffalo Science Museum featuring an oversized snake. Another for the Buffalo Zoo included a giant grinning gorilla presiding over the grounds. Her poster for what was then the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in 1981 offered a panorama of the museumβs history βperfect for creative coloring.β
Her color murals covered walls in Buffalo Early Childhood Center Schools 31, 74 and 78, as well as the Buffalo Academy of Visual and Performing Arts.
βIβd been trained as a fine artist and taught that commercial work was less interesting, more technical,β she explained to Karen Brady. βBut I felt that there were different ways of being an artist.β
She died July 8 in her home in the Parkside neighborhood after a period of declining health. She was 81.
Born in Buffalo, Julie Kulberg was the daughter of Siegfried Kulberg, the Austrian-born president of a local ironworks, and Lenore Loeser Kulberg, a librarian in the Buffalo and Erie County Public Library system. She grew up in Snyder, attending Park School and Amherst Junior and Senior High Schools, graduating in 1960.
She began studying at Syracuse University, then earned a bachelorβs degree in art history with a minor in painting at the University at Buffalo. She went on to take post-graduate courses in art, attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Social Work for a year and worked for a couple years at the former Ingleside Home.
A house portrait by Julie Lewitzky
One of her first exhibits was a display of watercolors and sketches in the Clarence Public Library. By 1972, her work was in the Members Gallery at the Albright-Knox.
All of her house portraits were produced from photographs. In 1984, she estimated that she had done more than 1,000 of them. She also created a line of Buffalo cards and put a whimsical design on boxes of macaroons called Buffalo Chips.
In recent years, her work was seen in the childrenβs Useum at the Burchfield Penney Art Center. Her last exhibit was in Bettyβs Restaurant in Allentown in 2018.
She also was active in Jewish Family Services, coordinating volunteers for the resettlement of emigres from Russia in the early 1990s and then coordinating volunteers for all the agencyβs programs.
By 2001, she had become volunteer coordinator for the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. In 2003, she oversaw the efforts of nearly 200 volunteers to accommodate the crowds that attended βMasterworks from the Phillips Collection,β the museumβs largest special exhibition up to that time.
She was married in 1965 to David Lewitzky, an Erie County mental health counselor and a published poet. Survivors also include a daughter, Beth Lewitzky; twin sons, Joel and Steven; and three granddaughters. Her brother, Andy Kulberg, a music producer and bassist with the influential 1960s rock band, the Blues Project, died in 2002.
Age 43 of Getzville, NY, fought valiantly with ovarian cancer. She gained her angel wings and peacefully joined her father on Thursday August 24th, 2023.
Beloved wife of 9 years to Jeffrey R. Smith; loving mother to Autumn and Graham; dearest daughter to Karen J. Gentry (Koch) and the late Mark E. Gentry; sweet grand-daughter to Janice K. Koch; caring sister to Kiel Gentry (Jina) Gregory Gentry (Jessica) Emily Krantz (Daniel) Amie Gentry (Louis) Carrie Gentry (Johnathan); daughter-in-law to Richard and Gail Smith; sister- in-law to Richard Smith II (Laurie) Bonnie Lorentz (Brian); Kate loved being an aunt to all her nieces and nephews (total of 19); also survived by aunts, uncles, cousins and many friends. Family will be present to receive relatives and friends Saturday, September 2nd, 2023 from 1pm-5pm at DENGLER, ROBERTS, PERNA FUNERAL HOME at 8630 Transit Road East Amherst NY 14051. A Celebration of Life will be held at a future date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Kateβs children, Autumn and Graham. Fond memories and condolences may be shared at www.denglerrobertspernafuneral.com.