Frances Farrand Dodge

Dodge.OhioRiverScene.DH3519.LR.jpg
Dodge.OhioRiverScene.DH3519.LR.jpg
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Frances Farrand Dodge

$2,500.00

Ohio River Scene

Oil on Canvas
14 x 23 inches

Signed Lower Left

ID: DH3519

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Frances Farrand Dodge (1878-1969) was the wife of Arthur Dodge whom she married in 1907.  They lived in a number of cities throughout the US including Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Paul and New York.  She was also the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hart A. Farrand. Graduating in 1898 from Central High School in Lansing, Michigan, where she had been the Art Editor for the Oracle, she went on to study at Michigan State University, Syracuse University, The Art Students League in New York and The Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. She received specialized training in watercolor in Chicago; in etching in New York from Joseph Pennell; and in portraiture and oil painting in Cincinnati where she was a student of Frank Duveneck.

Respected and admired by art critics for her strength of watercolor technique, her originality in the use of color and her competence in all media, she was superb in watercolor and she was listed in "Who's Who in American Watercolorists".

Honored by numerous one-person shows throughout her life including those in Cincinnati, Pennsylvania and Chicago, Mrs. Dodge was featured at her last two in 1964; in March of that year at the Academy of Arts, Easton, Maryland, and in May, when her work was installed by the Association of Chicago Painters and Sculptors at the Chicago Galleries.

An Honorary Life Member of the Art Students League of New York, she held memberships in the Society of Etchers in the cities of Chicago and Dayton, the Women's Art Club of Cincinnati and the Baltimore Watercolor Club. Also included were memberships with the National Association of Women Artists, the Chicago Galleries Association, and the Association of Chicago Painters and Sculptors

Always leading participants in the artistic movement of the areas in which they lived, both she and her husband were charter members of the Academy of the Arts in Easton, Maryland. She also maintained active memberships locally in the Harbor Club, the Women's Club of Talbot County and the Talbot County Garden Club.

Having suffered for a number of years with heart disease, she died at her home - Deep Water Point - on January 12, 1969.