Boston Watercolor Club

The Boston Watercolor Club (sometimes written Boston Water Color Club) was a society formed in 1887 to promote women watercolor artists in and around Boston, Massachusetts.

History

The Boston Watercolor Club was formed in 1887 to promote and exhibit the work of women artists at a time when they were barred from admission to the male-run Boston Watercolor Society.[1] The group held annual exhibitions.[1] In 1896 the group began admitting male members,[1] and artists such as John La Farge[2] and Maurice Prendergast[3] joined the club.

The group had counterparts in other cities, including the Baltimore Watercolor Club, founded in 1885 because women artists were barred from the Charcoal Club of Baltimore.[4]

The club's records from the period 1887–1916 are held by the Archives of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution.[1]

Notable women members

gollark: They should be. Religion mostly deals with unfalsifiable vague claims and "faith", which is basically the opposite of empiricism.
gollark: Declining religion.
gollark: Sure. Although it's still hard to distinguish whether that's a "science" thing or a "weird societal factors" thing.
gollark: I think those just became uncool due to other factors of some kind; there are plenty of Christians etc.
gollark: Actually, "abounded" would probably mean "unbounded", "a" generally negates things.

References

  1. "Water Color Club administrative record book, 1887-1916". Smithsonian Institution website.
  2. Yarnall, James L. "John La Farge and Henry Adams in Japan." American Art Journal 21:1 (1989), 41-77.
  3. Burke, Doreen Bolger. American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, vol. 1. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1994, p. 336.
  4. Rasmussen, Frederick N. "Back Story: Female painters founded Watercolor Society". Baltimore Sun, April 11, 2013.
  5. Heller, Jules, and Nancy G. Heller. "Sears, Sarah Choate (1858-1935)". In North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary, pp. 84, 127, 501.
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