Of course, however accomplished women artists born in the 19th century and who continued to create and exhibit their works into the mid-20th, they were rarely recognized with the popular and critical attention that male artists enjoyed.
All these threads of her remarkable career are evident in the the Academy Art’s subtitles that organize this comprehensive exhibition beginning in the Lederer Gallery with “Petunias, Provincetown and Process,” which bears witness to the introductory wall-label statement from the artist herself: “Often I can’t get a thing out of my system with just one print.” So, moving on from the lovely 1932 white-line block print “The White Petunia,” we encounter the solo “White Petunia’ of her 1943 monotype, “Petunias” of various colors in the 1934 monotype, followed by the 1940 “One Petunia” on paper, and, in the final statement on the subject, a ruddy red untitled petunia captured in her 1943 watercolor. Finally, images switch from flowers to Provincetown where she maintained a home studio adorned by potted flowers she lovingly tended. The new repeating subject here is “The Provincetown Church Tower,” starting with a 1921 graphite on paper and continuing with five more images of the same tower through 1922.
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