Dwight, Mabel
Mabel Dwight (1875–1955) was an American artist whose lithographs showed scenes of ordinary life with humor and tolerance. Carl Zigrosser, who had studied it carefully, wrote that "Her work is imbued with pity and compassion, a sense of irony, and the understanding that comes of deep experience." Between the late 1920s and the early 1940s, she achieved both popularity and critical success. In 1936, Prints magazine named her one of the best living printmakers, and a critic at the time said she was one of the foremost lithographers in the United States.
Read more on Wikipedia →Artworks by Dwight, Mabel
Farmyard
Dwight, Mabel
Silence
Dwight, Mabel
Stick 'Em Up
Dwight, Mabel
Summer Evening
Dwight, Mabel
Portrait of Paul Robeson
Dwight, Mabel
Tight Rope Walker
Dwight, Mabel
Train Station (New Hope)
Dwight, Mabel
Children's Clinic (#2)
Dwight, Mabel
St. Nicholas
Dwight, Mabel
Queer Fish
Dwight, Mabel
Winter, Central Park
Dwight, Mabel
Portrait of Paul Robeson
Dwight, Mabel
Portrait of C. Z.
Dwight, Mabel
The Clinch
Dwight, Mabel
Danse Macabre
Dwight, Mabel
Banana Men
Dwight, Mabel
Museum Guard
Dwight, Mabel
Penitentes Graveyard
Dwight, Mabel
Life Class
Dwight, Mabel
Ferry Boat
Dwight, Mabel