Grace Spaulding John

Grace Spaulding John, (1890 – 1972), American painter, author and lecturer born in Battle Creek, Michigan. Her to come years were spent in Vermont, and a propos the age of thirteen she moved taking into consideration her associates to Texas.

She studied at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts, at the National Academy of Design, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and at the Art Students League, variously later than Charles Webster Hawthorne, Daniel Garber, Fred Weber and in the same way as Emil Bisttram in Taos.

“A fine portrait painter, she executed on peak of a hundred and twenty-five portraits, all the end from life, among them Thomas Mann, Edgar Lee Masters, and Oveta Culp Hobby dressed in her uniform as first commander of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps which is now in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.. During her career, she had twenty-seven one-man shows.”

John is the author of the books “Memo: Verses as soon as Drawings by the Author”, “The Living Line: Drawings and Verses.” (1962), “The Knotless Thread” (1970), “One-Plus One_Plus One (1972) and is the illustrator of “Azalea Commemorating Its Twentieth Annual Azalea Trail Houston” (1955).

Grace Spaulding John's papers can be found at the Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University.

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