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Dulah Marie Evans
Dulah Marie Evans, later Dulah Evans Krehbiel
(1875-1951) was an American painter, printmaker, illustrator, and
photographer.
She was born in Oskaloosa, Iowa. She attended Penn
College and graduated from The Art Institute of Chicago, where she
studied under John Vanderpoel and Frederick Richardson. While a
student at The Art Institute, Dulah spent her summers in Saugatuck,
Michigan, studying under John C. Johansen and other prominent artists.
She completed her postgraduate work at the Art Students League in
New York, where she won many first place awards in illustration
classes under the instruction of Walter Appleton Clark. She also
studied under Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, Massachusetts,
and at the New York School of Art under William Merritt Chase.
This was the 'Golden Age of Illustration' (1865-1917)
and Dulah was part of it. She held a place in the prestigious Tree
Studio building in Chicago from 1903 through 1905 along with other
well-known painters such as Pauline Palmer, Walter Marshall Clute,
Louis Betts, and sculptor Julia Bracken Wendt, with whom she developed
a close friendship. During these years, Dulah was working as an
illustrator and freelance commercial artist, creating images for
the covers of magazines such as Harper's Bazaar, Leslie's Illustrated
Weekly, and Ladies' Home Journal.
Dulah also accepted commissions from Armour Food
Company and Santa Fe Railroad, both headquartered in Chicago at
the time. These commissions often took Dulah to Santa Fe, New Mexico,
to photograph Native American subjects in their daily routine and
performing ritualistic dances. Many of Dulah's Southwest photographs
would be used in later years as the subjects for her paintings,
woodcuts, lithographs, and etchings. She completed a series of three
paintings related to The Deer Dance of the Tesuque Indians in 1905.
Dulah left the Tree Studio in 1906 to marry Albert
Henry Krehbiel (1873-1945), a fellow classmate from The Art Institute
of Chicago. Albert was awarded an American Traveling Scholarship
from the Art Institute in 1903 and, having spent three years studying
at Academie Julian in Paris and traveling and painting throughout
Europe, had accepted a teaching position at the Institute upon his
return in May of 1906. In 1907, Albert reduced his schedule to teaching
summer sessions only and undertook the awarded commission to design
and paint the eleven wall and two ceiling murals for the Illinois
Supreme Court Building in the state capitol of Springfield (the
murals were completed in 1911). Dulah was Albert's only assistant,
performing the duties of designing costumes, modeling, and conducting
research on material pertinent to the theme of the murals. As with
many husband and wife artists of the time, Dulah and Albert frequently
painted together and often painted the same subject. They each had
a high regard for the other's work and Albert, unlike many men of
his day, was proud of his wife's artistic career and success.
From 1910 through 1915, Dulah worked out of her
new "Ridge Crafts Studio" in Park Ridge, Illinois, a suburb
north of Chicago where she and Albert had purchased a large home.
Here, she created a line of exclusively designed cards and folders
for all occasions. Most of these cards were hand-colored engraved
images, while others were hand-colored lithographs. A sample sales
book of these cards is now in the collection of the National Museum
of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. Dulah's assistants, appropriately
called the "Ridge Craft Girls", often pulled double duty
as models for both Dulah's and Albert's paintings. However, no individual
was asked to pose more than their son and only child, Evans Llan
Krehbiel, born in 1914. One of Dulah's first paintings of Evans,
appropriately titled Baby Krehbiel (1915, 22" x 30", oil
on canvas), was featured in the Chicago Daily Herald on March 14th,
1915.
During these early years in Park Ridge, Dulah and
Albert were part of the Park Ridge Art Colony. Founded by members
of the faculty of the Art Institute, the colony's objective was
to create a society that would work for the encouragement of artistic
culture. As was stated in an article in The Chicago Evening Post
(July 6, 1912);
" . . . All intend to support the new association,
which will expend its energies in public school art, and co-operate
with the other clubs, while going its own way in search of culture."
Among the other distinguished members of the Park
Ridge Art Colony were founding painters Frederick Richardson, James
William Pattison, Louis Betts, and Walter Marshall Clute, and sculptor
John Paulding.
From 1917 through 1920, Dulah (traveling with Albert,
Evans, and her sister, journalist and playwright Mayetta Evans)
spent summers painting in California at the Santa Monica Art Colony.
Dulah's friend and fellow Tree Studio artist, Julia Bracken, had
married painter William Wendt in 1906 and moved to Los Angeles,
becoming one of the city's foremost sculptors. By 1918, William
Wendt had built a studio at Laguna Beach and California Impressionism
was in full swing. Dulah's many paintings of her son and sister
posing along the beach reflected this style. One such work, Santa
Monica Bay (1920, 17" x 21", oil on canvas), was exhibited
at the Arts Club of Chicago in 1923, where Dulah was a founding
member.
Dulah would return to Santa Monica many times,
often after having spent the initial summer months at the Art Colony
of Santa Fe in New Mexico, which was started by Alice Corbin Henderson,
editor of the magazine Poetry, and wife of Indian motif painter
William Penhallow Henderson. In 1927, Dulah visited fellow artist
B. J. O. Nordfeldt at his studio in Santa Fe, where she and her
sister bought ten of his paintings. On this trip, Dulah took photographs
of the studios of several Taos artists, including those of Ernest
Blumenschein, painter and one of the founders of the Taos Society
of Artists, and painter Gerald Cassidy, as well as photographs of
the home of Mabel Dodge Luhan. (A wealthy heiress from New York,
Mabel Dodge Luhan transformed Taos, New Mexico, into an artist colony
in the 1920s and 30s by inviting such noted artists as Georgia O'Keeffe
and D. H. Lawrence to join her in the town's idyllic setting, which
she considered to be the center for cultural and spiritual salvation.)
It was in California that Dulah began painting
in the modernist style. She created works that were more introspective
in nature and which had spiritual overtones. Dulah became interested
in the organization of multiple figures, often using groupings of
three (perhaps to reveal a spiritual synthesis) in surrealistic
mountain landscapes. She produced different tensions with each canvas
by the placement of subject figures in positions juxtaposed to their
rocky surroundings. One such work, Mountain Pass (September 1920,
23" x 24", oil on canvas), was exhibited at the Chicago
Arts Club in 1927. Dulah created her first etchings relating to
the Southwest in 1927. Her Southwest prints were sold in the Albert
Roullier Galleries in Chicago and were often featured in Chicago
newspapers and magazines. In 1930, Dulah left Park Ridge for New
York City, where she was successful in establishing a market for
her artwork at the Salons of America and the Society of Independent
Artists.
Returning to her Park Ridge home and her studio
(now called "Studio Place") in 1932, Dulah persevered
in creating her ethereal landscapes throughout the decade and beyond.
From the early 1920s through the 1940s, she exhibited at the Arts
Club of Chicago with other well-known artists, including painter
Pauline Palmer and Bauhaus photographer László Moholy-Nagy,
and at The Art Institute of Chicago with painters Gerald Cassidy,
Jessie Wilcox Smith, Edgar Payne, and J. Alden Weir. As if to reflect
the diversity of her art, throughout her career Dulah signed her
works as Dulah Marie Evans, Dulah Llan Evans, and as Dulah Evans
Krehbiel.
The Park Ridge Modernist, as Dulah had become known,
died at the age of 76 on July 24th, 1951, in Evanston, Illinois.
Dulah's impressionistic work, Three Ladies at an Open Window (August
1920, 14" x 17", oil on canvas) was selected in 2001 for
the permanent collection of the National Museum of Women in the
Arts in Washington, D.C.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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