Laura Woodward

Laura Woodward (1834–1926) was an American painter. She was inducted into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame in 2013.

Laura Woodward was born upon March 18, 1834, in Mount Hope in Orange County, New York. She was the oldest out of three children. Her siblings' names were Thomas and Elizabeth. She lived in New York City and painted in the Catskills, the White Mountains, the Adirondacks, the Green Mountains, Maine coast, Massachusetts coast, Connecticut, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. She captured many landscapes in oil upon canvas and watercolor and was a enthusiast of the Hudson River School and White Mountain School. She exhibited her action at the American Art Gallery, National Academy of Design, Boston Art Club, Brooklyn Art Association, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Centennial Exhibition of 1876, Chicago and Cincinnati's industrial expositions and Louisville's recurring Southern Exposition. There was many occasions where she signed her broadcast L. Woodward to avoid monster rejected by juried shows or discriminated adjacent to by supplementary committees, judges, or critics. During her beforehand career as an artist, she became colleagues and contacts with many Hudson River School artists, including James D. Smillie and Julie Hart Beers.

Woodward began to spend the winters in St. Augustine, Florida in the 1880s and by the end of 1889 she had united Martin Johnson Heade and the supplementary artists at Henry M. Flagler's Ponce de Leon Hotel. By 1890, her younger sister, Libby, would sometimes travel to Florida as soon as due to her increasingly ill health in the hope that it would extend her life.

Woodward was disappointed in the Ancient City because it was not as tropical as she had hoped, so she traveled throughout Florida searching for exotic natural world and flowers. She was told of how beautiful Palm Beach was and made the arduous trip south to discover the authentic tropical foliage she was sore spot for. By 1889 Woodward was spending era in Palm Beach and Jupiter, painting outdoor amid what was subsequently largely jungle and swampland inhabited by panthers, bears, and numerous alligators. She brought her watercolor sketches of that Place back to St. Augustine where she associated her friend Martin Johnson Heade and the other artists at Henry M. Flagler's Ponce de Leon Hotel. There she became famous for her renderings of the "curious" Royal Poinciana tree and its blossoms. The media Definite she should be "adopted by each and every one state" of Florida due to the pretension she publicized its natural beauties.

Flagler owned at least two of Woodward's paintings at his St. Augustine home, Kirkside.--a Palm Beach royal poinciana tree and a seascape. Woodward after that exhibited her act out at Flagler's Florida Times-Union headquarters in St. Augustine. According to documented family history that is corroborated in the award-winning Laura Woodward: The Artist Behind the Innovator Who Developed Palm Beach, she (and her friend Frances Cragin) told Henry Flagler that Palm Beach should be developed as a resort, using her paintings as full-color evidence of her visionary ideas. Flagler listened to Laura and her friend, was compelled by her art, and bought property in the similar locations depicted in Woodward's paintings. When Flagler was constructing his Palm Beach Hotel Royal Poinciana in 1893, he conventional a house and studio for Woodward there--a enduring atelier was included once the hotel was completed in 1894. His newspapers also conventional Woodward as being blamed for publicizing the allure of the east coast of Florida to every nation. Although she often visited New York and various parts of Florida, Woodward made Palm Beach her home from 1893 to 1926.

One of the Florida areas visited by Woodward was Miami and the regions all but it. She painted Seminoles in their dugout canoes and with sketched in the Everglades--despite the risky conditions there. In 1895, Laura, her sister Libbie, and Mrs. Julia Tuttle had an exciting adventure on the Miami River. Woodward's works of Miami and its environs, as competently as many supplementary Florida locales, were well received by the Florida and New York media and collected by prominent art patrons.

Laura Woodward became nationally capably known for her delicate renderings in oil and watercolor of unspoiled nature throughout Florida. In 1920, when the Palm Beach Art League was established, Woodward was expected as their speculator and became an honorary member. Tragically, due to failing eyesight, Laura was unable to continue painting by subsequently but remained highly regarded as the famous Florida artist and the pioneer artiste of Palm Beach. She continued successful in Palm Beach until 1926 when, at the age of 92, it was valuable for her to have an effect on to St. Cloud where her caregivers lived. She died hurriedly thereafter on May 9, 1926. In 1940 the Palm Beach Art League held Woodward's memorial exhibition and helped found the Norton Gallery and School of Art, dedicated in 1941 (Norton Museum of Art).

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