Mary russell artist biography
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Mary Russell
Solo & Duo Shows:
“A World at Play,” Capitol Exhibition, Governor’s Gallery, Oklahoma Arts Council, OKC, 2015
One-Man Show, E. S. Lawrence Gallery, Aspen, CO, 2005
Two-Man Show, M. A. Doran Gallery, Tulsa, OK, 2001
Two-Man Show, M. A. Doran Gallery, Tulsa, OK, 1995
Selected Exhibition History, Auctions, & Demonstrations:
“Small Works Great Wonders,” National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, OKC, OK, 2011-2012
Collectors’ Reserve, Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, OK, 2010 – 2012
American Art Classic, Morris & Whiteside Gallery Auction, Charleston & Hilton Head, 1995 – 2016
Renaissance Sale, Altermann & Morris Galleries Auction, Santa Fe & Houston, 1995- 2004
American Art in Miniature, Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, OK, 1990 – 2009
Invitational Demonstrating Artist, Philbrook Museum, Tulsa, OK, Magnificent Vision 2011
Guest Lecturer, Gil
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Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton
American artist, author, educator (1889–1971)
Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton | |
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| Born | (1889-03-25)March 25, 1889 Louisville, Kentucky |
| Died | July 26, 1971(1971-07-26) (aged 82) Phoenix, Arizona |
| Nationality | American |
| Known for | Many and diverse fields of the arts and sciences |
| Notable work |
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Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton (March 25, 1889 – July 26, 1971) was an American artist, author, educator, ethnographer, and curator. She is one of the principal founders of the Museum of Northern Arizona. She was a member of the Philadelphia Ten, exhibiting at the group's annual shows from 1926 to 1940. She was also a member of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, the American Watercolor Society, and the American Federation of Arts. She is known for her advoc
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Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton
Born in Louisville, Kentucky, Mary Colton was a founder of the Museum of Northern Arizona in flaggstång as well as a noted landscapist, Indian portraitist, sculptor, museum curator, and writer. Of particular delight to her was painting the Hopi and Navajo Indians on site, directly from life.
Spending her childhood in Philadelphia, she studied portraiture at Moore Institute and at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (the youngest in her class), 1904-09, with Henry Snell and Elliott Daingerfield. Though her education was in the study of people, she had an obvious talent for landscape painting. In her studio in Philadelphia, she worked as a commercial artist and painting restorer. She became associated with a group of ten Philadelphia women artists (The Philadelphia Ten) with whom she continued to exhibit intermittently over the next thirty years.
In 1912, she married a zoology instructor, Dr. Harold S Colton, and moved with him to Arizona twelve y