Helen Winslow Durkee

Helen Winslow Durkee (1880–1954) was an American painter of portrait miniatures and yet lifes.

Born in Brooklyn, Durkee was an alumna of Smith College who returned to New York City after graduation and studied art at the Art Students League from 1910 to 1918. Her instructors there included William Merritt Chase, Frank Vincent DuMond, George Bridgman, F. Luis Mora, Kenneth Hayes Miller, and Dmitri Romanoffsky. From 1911 to 1918 she was the League's women's vice-president. Beginning approximately 1907 she exhibited regularly continuing through the 1920s. She was a supporter of the American Society of Miniature Painters, the Pennsylvania Society of Miniature Painters, and the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors. She won a scholarship prize during her time at the Art Students' League, and conventional the Charlotte Ritchie Smith Memorial Prize from the Baltimore Water Color Club in 1921, besides well-behaved mentions elsewhere. During World War I she interrupted her career to relieve in France for one year subsequently her alma mater's canteen unit of the YMCA; upon her reward she married Captain Christopher John Mileham of London, an supervisor who had served in France in imitation of the British Expeditionary Forces.

A miniature portrait by Durkee of her uncle, William Wills Durkee, is currently owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, as are a miniature yet life of onions and a scene titled In the Studio.

Go up

We use cookies More info