American painter
Study for Cotton Scene (1941), a mural Warthen created for the post office in Hartselle, Alabama
Ferol Katherine Sibley Warthen (May 22, 1890 – January 21, 1986), also known as Mrs. Lee R. Warthen , was an American painter and printmaker.
Warthen was born Ferol Sibley in Aberdeen , South Dakota . She received a full scholarship to the Columbia Art School in Ohio , which she attended from 1908 until 1910. From 1911 until 1913 she was a student of William Merritt Chase and Kenneth Hayes Miller at the Art Students League of New York , and she received her bachelor's degree in education from Ohio State University . She continued her studies later in life with Karl Knaths , Blanche Lazzell , and Un'ichi Hiratsuka . She moved to the Washington, D.C. area in the 1930s, and remained there for the rest of her life, though she exhibited widely elsewhere. A specialist in woodblock prints , she also worked in oils, watercolor, and gouache . Organizations with which she exhibited include the Society of Independent Artists , the National Academy of Design , the Philadelphia Water Color Club, the Provincetown Art Association , the Washington Print Club, the Washington Printmakers Society, and the Washington Water Club; she also belonged to the Society of Washington Artists, the Philadelphia Color Print Society, and Boston Printmakers. From 1973 until 1974 she was the subject of a solo exhibition at the National Museum of American Art .[ 1] Warthen was associated with the Provincetown Printers during her career, and frequently summered in Provincetown.[ 2] [ 3] Married to Lee Roland Warthen ,[ 4] she died in Silver Spring , Maryland .[ 5]
Three pieces by Warthen are in the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. These include a gouache study for a mural, Cotton Scene (1941), for the post office of Hartselle , Alabama ,[ 6] and two woodcuts, Table Top (1963)[ 7] and Lighthouse (1972).[ 8] Cotton Scene has been relocated to the Hartselle Chamber of Commerce office in the town's historic railroad depot.[ 9] A painting, Ladies Luncheon , is owned by the Cape Cod Museum of Art .[ 10]
References
International National Artists