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The society was founded in 1866 by eleven painters and was originally known as the American Society of Painters in Water Colors. [1] Initially, it was difficult to draw in new members, partially because some artists of the time opposed the society's policy of allowing women to join. [2] The New York Watercolor Club merged into the society in 1941.
In 1941, she married writer Martin Dreyer and became Margaret Webb Dreyer. They were married for 35 years, until her death in 1976. Martin Dreyer was a fiction writer published in Esquire, Prairie Schooner, and the university-based "little magazines" of the 1940s, and whose work was "starred" in several editions of the Best Short Stories of the Year.
Ellen Isham Schutt (April 15, 1873 – December 5, 1955) was an early 20th-century American botanical illustrator for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Her work now forms part of the USDA National Agricultural Library's Pomological Watercolor Collection.
Washington University in St. Louis Gallery of Art, St. Louis, Missouri Mending the Net: Oil on canvas 1881 32.1 x 45.1 in 81.6 x 114.6 cm Philadelphia Museum of Art The Sculptor - Portrait of William R. O'Donovan: Oil on canvas ca.1891-92 Lost, probably destroyed Portrait of Amelia Van Buren: Oil on canvas c.1891 44.8 x 31.8 in 114 x 81 cm
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As her work developed, the range of media she worked in expanded until it embraced metalwork, stained glass, bookbinding, and tooled leather, as well as print media (woodcuts) and watercolor. [3] Many of her works feature floral motifs, and there is a clear influence from Asian art in both style and subject matter that is especially evident in ...
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