Josephine Paddock

Josephine Paddock (April 18, 1885 – 1964) was an American painter born in New York City. She earned a B.A. degree at Barnard College and studied at the Art Students League as soon as Robert Henri, Kenyon Cox, William Merritt Chase, and John Alexander.

Her sister Ethel Louise Paddock was born two years later. She afterward studied subsequently Henri and would also become a painter and a devotee of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors. Both sisters would go on to exhibit at Henri's Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910, a produce an effect that in some ways was a prototype for the Armory Show three years later.

Paddock was one of the artists who exhibited at this landmark show. The put it on included three of her watercolors. These were: Swans on the grass ($50), Swan study-peace ($50), and Swan study-aspiration ($50).

Her do its stuff was along with forty-eight 19th and 20th Century paintings in the addition of Seymour R. Thaler and Mildred Thaler Cohen which was bequeathed to the Mattatuck Museum, Waterbury, Connecticut, in 2000.

Paddock was a believer of the American Watercolor Society, Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, New Haven Paint & Clay Club, Grand Central Art Gallery, NYC, North Shore Art Association, Gloucester, MA, American Artist Professional League.

The Josephine Paddock Fellowship is the highest great compliment for graduate studies in the arts at Barnard College, Columbia University, in New York City.

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