Julia
Dillon
(1834 - 1919)
| Works
by Julia Dillon |
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In
the 1987 re-issue forward to Ms. Dillon's 1915 book Old Gardens of Kingston, Julia
Dillon is described as a "forerunner of the liberated women of today".
Her life-long dedication to painting and teaching, her travels to Europe to study
and paint, as well as her constant active community involvement and vibrant, generous
personality certainly make her an inspiring and influential figure of her time.
She was born in Kingston, NY, in 1834, the oldest child of Charles McEntee and
Christina Tremper. After marrying John Dillon in 1866 she continued to live in
the Rondout area, and was compelled to become involved in her husband's business,
McEntee and Dillon Rondout Foundry, after his death in 1873.
Her early studies in Paris in 1872 and time spent
working in the studio of her cousin Jervis McEntee, the accomplished and renowned
Hudson River School painter, led to exhibitions at the National Academy of Design
in 1876. In the 1870's and 80's she lived in New York City, and her East 10th
Street studio was visited by students and artists from all over. During later
studies in Paris she was a pupil of the English genre painter Harry Thompson and
the French floral painter Georges Jeannin. Throughout the last quarter of the
19th Century she exhibited widely, included in shows at the Columbia Exhibition
in Chicago, the Art Institute
of Chicago, the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Art, and the Brooklyn Art Association.
In 1893 she returned to Kingston. Along with continuing
to exhibit and teach, Mrs. Dillon led an active life and was very involved in
Kingston community affairs and projects. She helped to establish the Kingston
City Hospital, the Kingston
Library, and the Ulster Garden Club, and was a member of the D.A.R. and the
State Aid Charity Association. She was the author of Old Gardens of Kingston,
and was part of the literary group The Monday Club. Julia Dillon died in Kingston
in 1919, and remains best known for her unique and beautiful floral paintings.
Julia McEntee Dillon's work has been included in
the Newark Museum's "Women Artists" exhibit, and the Ulster
County Historical Society held a commemorative exhibition in 1987. A painting
of hers was exhibited in the show American Beauty: The Rose in American Art, at
Berry-Hill Galleries, New York, in 1997. Works by Julia Dillon are listed in the
Inventory of American Paintings, Smithsonian Institution. A painting of hers entitled
Artist's Home and Studio was featured in Grandmother's Garden: the Old-Fashioned
American Garden 1865-1915, by Mary Brawley Hill ( Harry N. Abrams, 1995 ).
Most recently an extensive retrospective of Dillon's
work was held in 2005 at the Fred
Johnston Museum in Kingston, New York. Organized by the Friends
of Historic Kingston in conjunction with the Ulster Garden Club, and guest
curated by Charles Glasner and Sanford Levy of Jenkinstown Antiques, the show
made her work available to a broad spectrum of the public and helped to further
demonstrate her important position in turn of the 20th Century floral painting.
A catalogue by Mr. Levy was published in conjunction with the exhibition, and
is available at our shop (telephone 845-255-4876, or email info@JenkinstownAntiques.com),
or through the Friends of Historic Kingston (telephone 845-339-0720).
We
are always interested in purchasing paintings by this artist and in learning any
new information about her life and work.
If you have any work or information about Ms. Dillon, please contact us at info@JenkinstownAntiques.com
or call us at 845-255-4876. |