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Hilda Belcher

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Artist

Known for
  
Painting

Name
  
Hilda Belcher

Education
  
Barringer High School


Born
  
September 20, 1881 (
1881-09-20
)
Pittsford, Vermont

Died
  
April 27, 1963, Vermont, United States

Hilda Belcher (September 20, 1881 – April 27, 1963 ) was an American artist known for her paintings, watercolors, portraits, and illustrations depicting individuals and landscapes, both in formal portraiture and in casual scenes of daily life.

Contents

Biography

Born in Pittsford, Vermont, in 1881, Belcher was the oldest child of Martha Wood Belcher, an artist, and Stephen Paterson Belcher, a manufacturer of stained glass. When she was a teenager, the family relocated to Newark, New Jersey, but retained their home in Vermont. Belcher graduated from Newark High School in 1900 and later moved to New York City to attend the New York School of Art, where she studied with William Merritt Chase, Kenneth Hayes Miller, George Bellows and Robert Henri.

After the death of her father in 1906, Belcher lived with her mother and took extended trips to Italy, England, and Wales in 1910; the Rocky Mountains in the western United States in 1912; and Europe, for an eleven-month tour, in 1913-14. Belcher also became well known in Georgia, where she painted landscapes of the Savannah area and scenes representative of the area's African American culture in the early part of the century. In 1926, Belcher was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full member in 1932.

Belcher also published illustrations, cartoons, and caricatures that appeared in popular magazines such as Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, and Town and Country, as well as in the catalogs of Sears, Roebuck and Company.

Belcher died on April 27, 1963, in Pittsford, and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Rutland, Vermont.

Awards

  • Beal Prize, New York Water Color Club - 1909
  • Julia A. Shaw Prize - 1926
  • Thomas R. Proctor Prize - 1933
  • Honorary master's degree from Middlebury College - 1941
  • References

    Hilda Belcher Wikipedia