Raymer Society Consignment Art Auction
Lot 103:
Whittemore, Margaret (1897-1983), reduction, signature: Margaret Whittimore, Young Robins, image dimensions:5 x 8.25, total dimensions:, weight:lb Graphic artist, Margaret Whittemore was born into a family of Washburn College teachers on September 7, 1897, in Topeka, Kansas, growing up there. Her father, Luther D. Whittemore was a professor of Latin and education, and her mother Frances Davis Whittemore was director of the art department. The artist-to-be studied, naturally enough, at Washburn (today a University) from 1915-1919, receiving her degree.From 1920-1923, she studied graphic arts at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois. In 1927, she taught art at Bethany College, in Lindsborg, Kansas. From 1928-1935, she edited the national publication of the honorary art fraternity Delta Phi Delta, The Palette.Whittemore moved from Topeka to Kissimmee, Florida, in 1952, spending a number of years in both Short Hills, New Jersey, and Sarasota, Florida, before choosing Sarasota as her home. She would die there on November 24, 1983.While Whittemore did some work in oil, her primary medium in the expression of Kansas subjects was the graphic arts, wood block prints in particular. Around 1930, magazines and newspapers began publishing her prints of historic landmarks, as well as her earlier birds and trees. She illustrated books by other writers, while also writing and illustrating her own. Sketchbook of Kansas Landmarks, published in 1936, was her first book. It featured drawings and descriptions of historically significant landmarks like the capitol, missions, old trails, homes, bridges and trees. The 1955 Exhibit of Chicago and Midwestern Bookmaking honored Whittemore’s Historic Kansas: A Centenary Sketchbook, 1954. Her One-Way Ticket to Kansas appeared in 1959.Whittemore’s work is in the Kansas collections of the Emporia Library; Topeka Public Library; University of Kansas, Lawrence; and Butler County Historical Society, in El Dorado.An early oil, Santa Fe Poster, was shown at the Kansas City Art Institute in their 1923 exhibition of work by artists of Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. Whittemore, during summer study with Birger Sandzen at the Broadmoor Academy, Colorado Springs, painted another oil, Sunrise on Pikes Peak, which was also exhibited at the Institute in the 1924 Midwestern Artists exhibition. Other exhibitions included the Prairie Print Makers, which traveled through Kansas. She won "Best Print by a Kansas Artist" in the 1936 American Block Print exhibition, in Wichita, Kansas.
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