Helena Wood Smith

Helena Wood Smith (1865-1914) was an American artist.

Early life and education

Helena Wood Smith was born on March 9, 1865, in Bangor, Maine. She was the sister of novelist, Ruel Perley Smith. Helena attended the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

Career

By 1912, she had moved to Carmel-by-the-Sea, California and was the instructor of "drawing and painting from nature" at the local School of Arts & Crafts.[1] She exhibited at the San Francisco Art Association (1910–13), Carmel Arts & Crafts Club (1913), and the Hotel Del Monte Art Gallery (1911–13). In August 1914, she was strangled and buried on the beach by her lover, Japanese art-photographer George Kodani, who was convicted of second degree murder and sentenced to life in prison.[1][2]

Part of her early exhibition history includes the: Boston Art Club (1893-1900), Annuals of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (1896–97), Water Color Club of Washington, D.C. (1902), and Annual of the Art Club of Philadelphia (1900).[3] At the latter, her entry was entitled "Merestead, Gardens of the Pilgrims".[4] Smith was also discussed in Corelli C. W. Simpson's Leaflet of Artists (J.W. Bacon, 1893).

References

  1. Edwards, Robert W. (2012). Jennie V. Cannon: The Untold History of the Carmel and Berkeley Art Colonies, Vol. 1. Oakland, Calif.: East Bay Heritage Project. pp. 135–136, 141–148, 636, 691. ISBN 9781467545679. An online facsimile of the entire text of Vol. 1 is posted on the Traditional Fine Arts Organization website ("Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-04-29. Retrieved 2016-06-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)).
  2. Edan Hughes, Artists in California, 786-1940 (San Francisco: Crocker Art Museum, 2002)
  3. American Art Annual 4, 1903-04, p. II-68.
  4. The Catalog of the Annual Exhibition of the Penn. Academy of Fine Arts (1896), v. 66-67; Catalog of the Annual Exhibition of Oil Paintings and Sculpture, Art Club of Philadelphia (1900), v. 9-17
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