Nina B. Ward

Last updated

Nina Belle Ward (1885-1944), an American painter, was born to James Pegram Ward and Martha Vesta Payne on January 23, 1885, in Rome, Georgia. After attending high school in Chattanooga, Tennessee, she attended New York University's School of Pedagogy from 1902 to 1903, after which she became a student at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts during the 1905–06 academic year and won silver and bronze medals as well as an honorable mention for her color and black and white portraits, [1] From 1907 through 1912 she attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) where she won Cresson Traveling fellowships in 1908, 1909 and 1911 (among the first American women to be awarded the fellowship and the only woman to have been awarded three) allowing her to visit England, Wales, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, Belgium and Spain.

She exhibited paintings twice at the Corcoran Museum in Washington, D.C. in 1912 ("Portrait") and 1916 ("Young Woman in Black"). She won the first Toppan Prize at PAFA in 1912 and in 1914 she won the Mary Smith Prize for her painting "Elizabeth" at the Annual PAFA exhibit. [2] She exhibited at PAFA each year between 1911 and 1918: 1906, "Portrait"; 1912, "Portrait of Lady in Black"; 1913, "Woman in Old Fashioned Gown"; 1914, "Elizabeth"; 1915 "Young Girl in White"; 1916 "Lady in Black"; 1917, "The Rose Girl"; and two paintings during the 113th Annual exhibit in 1918, "Portrait: Mrs. Eliot", and "Portrait: Miss Mollie Little". [3] In 1915, her painting, "Young Girl in White" was also selected for the Tenth Annual Exhibition of Selected Paintings by American Artists at the City Art Museum of St. Louis, which opened September 12, 1915.

From 1912 through 1917 she taught drawing and painting at The Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, while residing at 1719 Green Street, Philadelphia. Until 1922, she taught art in Pennsylvania, Delaware (Wilmington High School), and Ohio (Cleveland Junior High) before settling in Kalamazoo, Michigan. During the summer of 1922 she attended the Chicago Art Institute. She began teaching at Central High School in Kalamazoo in the fall of 1922 where she remained employed until 1943. Nina Ward was instrumental in founding the Kalamazoo Institute of the Arts (KIA) where she was the first and only teacher for several years. She also exhibited her work at the Michigan Art Show (Detroit, 1932) and in 1945, after her death, Ward's paintings were shown in a joint exhibition with the work of her student, Helen Janaszak . In 1930 she published an article in The School-Arts Magazine, in which she described the program she founded at KIA. [4] [5] She specialized in portraits but also painted the occasional still life and scenes from New England where she often spent summers painting, often accompanied by one or two of her students.

Nina Ward lived at 618 Potter Street in Kalamazoo, Michigan before her death on September 20, 1944, after a year-long sickness during which time she was nursed by her brother, Alexander Pitzer Ward. She was buried on September 25, 1944, at the Forrest Hills Cemetery in Chattanooga, Tennessee. [6]

Today her paintings are included in the permanent collections of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, [7] The Woodmere Art Museum, [8] and the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts. [9] One of her still life paintings is included in the Olivet College exhibition, "Beautiful Things: Still Life Paintings by American Women 1880-1940" at Olivet College, January 16-February 14, 2014. A retrospective of her work is being mounted at KIA from May 16, 2015 – August 23, 2015. Dana Ward maintains a website with images of Nina Ward's paintings. [10]

Related Research Articles

Henriette Wyeth Hurd was an American artist noted for her portraits and still life paintings. The eldest daughter of illustrator N.C. Wyeth, she studied painting with her father and brother Andrew Wyeth at their home and studio in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Grafly</span> American sculptor

Charles Allan Grafly, Jr. was an American sculptor, and teacher. Instructor of Sculpture at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for 37 years, his students included Paul Manship, Albin Polasek, and Walker Hancock.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts</span> Museum and art school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) is a museum and private art school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1805 and is the first and oldest art museum and art school in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kalamazoo Institute of Arts</span>

The Kalamazoo Institute of Arts (KIA) is a non-profit art museum and school in downtown Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anna Claypoole Peale</span> American painter

Anna Claypoole Peale was an American painter who specialized in portrait miniatures on ivory and still lifes. She and her sister, Sarah Miriam Peale, were the first women elected academicians of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

M. Jean McLane, was an American portraitist. Her works were exhibited and won awards in the United States and in Europe. She made portrait paintings of women and children. McLane also made portrait paintings of a Greek and Australian Premiers and Elisabeth, Queen of the Belgians.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank B. A. Linton</span>

Frank Benton Ashley Linton was an American portrait-painter and teacher. He was a student of Thomas Eakins, studied the École des Beaux-Arts, and won a bronze medal at the 1927 Salon Nationale in Paris. Likely a closeted gay man, he lived with pianist Samuel Meyers for more than thirty years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alice Barber Stephens</span> American painter

Alice Barber Stephens was an American painter and engraver, best remembered for her illustrations. Her work regularly appeared in magazines such as Scribner's Monthly, Harper's Weekly, and The Ladies Home Journal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Okie Paxton</span> American painter

Elizabeth Okie Paxton (1878–1972) was an American painter, married to another artist William McGregor Paxton (1869–1941). The Paxtons were part of the Boston School, a prominent group of artists known for works of beautiful interiors, landscapes, and portraits of their wealthy patrons. Her paintings were widely exhibited and sold well.

Elizabeth Osborne is an American painter who lives and works in Philadelphia. Working primarily in oil paint and watercolor, her paintings are known to bridge ideas about formalist concerns, particularly luminosity with her explorations of nature, atmosphere and vistas. Beginning with figurative paintings in the 1960s and '70s, she moved on to bold, color drenched, landscapes and eventually abstractions that explore color spectrums. Her experimental assemblage paintings that incorporated objects began an inquiry into psychological content that she continued in a series of self-portraits and a long-running series of solitary female nudes and portraits. Osborne's later abstract paintings present a culmination of ideas—distilling her study of luminosity, the landscape, and light.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Smith Prize</span>

The Mary Smith Prize (defunct) was a prestigious art prize awarded to women artists by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. It recognized the best work by a Philadelphia woman artist at PAFA's annual exhibition — one that showed "the most originality of subject, beauty of design and drawing, and finesse of color and skill of execution". The prize was founded in 1879 by Russell Smith in memory of his deceased daughter, artist Mary Russell Smith. It was awarded from 1879 to 1968.

Carol H. Beck (1859-1908) was an American historical painter, critic and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones</span> American painter (1885–1968)

Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones was an American painter who lived in New York City, Philadelphia, and Paris, France. She had a successful career as a painter at the turn of the century, exhibiting her works internationally and winning awards. She had a mental breakdown that caused a break in her career, and she returned to have a successful second career, creating modern watercolor paintings. She was a resident at three artist colonies, with notable artists, writers, and musicians. Sparhawk-Jones' works are in American art museums, including the Art Institute of Chicago, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Museum of Modern Art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Temple Gold Medal</span> Award given by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Joseph E. Temple Fund Gold Medal (defunct) was a prestigious art prize awarded by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts most years from 1883 to 1968. A Temple Medal recognized the best oil painting by an American artist shown in PAFA's annual exhibition. Recipients included James Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri and Edward Hopper.

Ethel V. Ashton was an American artist who primarily worked in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was both a subject of noted artist Alice Neel and a portraitist of Neel. Her early works reflect the influence of Ashcan realism focused primarily on portrait painting. She was commissioned to work on the Works Progress Administration's post office mural project and has works hanging in the permanent collections of several prominent museums. By the mid-1950s she worked with abstract concepts and through the end of the civil rights era, her works synthesize both abstract and realism. She also served as the librarian of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1957 into the early 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Bregler</span> American painter

Charles Bregler was an American portrait painter and sculptor, and a student of artist Thomas Eakins. Bregler wrote about Eakins's teaching methods, and amassed a large collection of his minor works, memorabilia and papers. Following Bregler's death, his widow safeguarded the Eakins collection for decades before selling it to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emily Clayton Bishop</span> American sculptor (1883–1912)

Emily Clayton Bishop was an American prize-winning sculptor. Although she died at a young age, her works in bronze and plaster are found in museum collections such as the Smithsonian American Art Museum and in shows such as Modern Women at PAFA (2013). Her childhood home, the Emily Clayton Bishop house, is a Maryland State historic site. The home sold in 2019 for $115,000.

Elizabeth Kitchenman Coyne was a Pennsylvania impressionist painter, best known for her landscapes and paintings of horses. Her works are included in the permanent collections of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Woodmere Art Museum and the Philadelphia Art Alliance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clifford Addams</span> American painter and etcher

Clifford Isaac Addams was an American painter and etcher, and a protégé of James McNeill Whistler.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Thurman Pearson Jr.</span> American painter

Joseph Thurman Pearson Jr. was an American landscape and portrait painter, and an instructor at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia.

References

  1. (Catalogue, 1905-1906).
  2. (Falk, 1989)
  3. Falk (1989a)
  4. (Ward, 1930)
  5. Lajeunesse letter
  6. Deaths and Burials
  7. ("Elizabeth", 1913)
  8. ("Portrait of Mrs. Rudolph Blankenburg)
  9. "Gloucester Harbor", "Portrait of a Girl in a Pink Dress", and "Portrait of a Woman in Black"
  10. Nina Ward's Paintings
  11. "Portrait of Mrs. Rudolph Blankenburg".
  12. "At Home And Abroad: Pennsylvania Academy's Annual Exhibition" (PDF). The New York Times . February 14, 1915. Retrieved July 7, 2013.
  13. "Elizabeth" . Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  14. "Gloucester Harbor" . Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  15. "Portrait of a Girl in a Pink Dress" . Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  16. "Portrait of a Woman in Black" . Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  17. "Nina B. Ward Paintings" . Retrieved December 28, 2013.