Jump to content

Ada Walter Shulz: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
added content to Further reading section
No edit summary
 
(22 intermediate revisions by 17 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American painter}}
{{short description|American painter}}

'''Ada Walter Shulz''' (October 21, 1870 – May 2, 1928) was an [[United States|American]] painter.
{{Infobox artist
| name = Ada Walter Shulz
| image =
| image_size =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| other_names =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1870|10|21|mf=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Terre Haute, Indiana]], United States
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1928|05|02|1870|10|21|mf=yes}}
| death_place = [[Nashville, Indiana]], US
| field = Painter
| spouse = [[Adolph Shulz]] (m. 1894–1926)
}}

'''Ada Walter Shulz''' (October 21, 1870 – May 2, 1928) was an American painter, whose [[Impressionism|Impressionistic]] painting style primarily featured themes of mothers, children, and barnyard animals. Her paintings won awards at the [[Art Institute of Chicago]] in 1916 and 1917 and the annual Hoosier Salon exhibitions of 1926 and 1928. Her paintings were also selected for magazine covers for ''Woman's Home Companion'' (January 1920) and ''Literary Digest'' (January 17, 1925). The [[Terre Haute, Indiana]], native studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and at the [[Académie Vitti]] in [[Paris]], [[France]]. In 1917 she moved from her longtime home in [[Delavan, Wisconsin]], with her artist husband, [[Adolph Shulz]], and son Walter, to the [[Brown County Art Colony]] in [[Nashville, Indiana]]. In 1926 she became a founding member of the Brown County Art Gallery Association in Nashville. She was also a member of the Chicago chapter of the Society of Western Artists. Her paintings are held in several collections, including those at the Art Institute of Chicago, the [[Indianapolis Museum of Art]] (Newfields), the [[Indiana State Museum]] and Historic Sites, the [[Swope Art Museum]], the [[Ball State University]] Museum of Art, the Dailey Family Memorial Collection of Hoosier Art at [[Indiana University]], the [[Brown County Art Gallery and Museum]], and the [[Art Museum of Greater Lafayette]], among others.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Ada Walter was born on October 21, 1870, in [[Terre Haute, Indiana]]. She was the daughter of Mary and John M. Walter, who had established a stone masonry and marble business and was also described as an architect. Ada's younger brother, Allen, was born when she was about two years old. Her father died of [[diphtheria]] in January 1873, before she was three years old.<ref name="fineestateart.com">{{cite web|url=http://fineestateart.com/artists/ada_walter_shulz |title=Artists :: Ada Walter Shulz |publisher=Fine Estate Art |date=1918-12-12 |accessdate=2017-05-08}}</ref><ref name=Tradition431>{{cite book | author=Judith Vale Newton and Carol Weiss | title =A Grand Tradition: The Arts and Artists of the Hoosier Salon, 1925–1990 | publisher =Hoosier Salon Patrons Association | series = | volume =| edition = | year =1993 | location =Indianapolis, Indiana | page =431 | url = | isbn =9780963836007}}</ref><ref name=Sunlight16>{{cite journal| author=Rachel Perry| title =Children and Sunlight: The Life and Work of Ada Walter Shulz | journal =Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History | volume =10 | issue = | pages =16| publisher =Indiana Historical Society | location =Indianapolis | date =Winter 1993| url =| accessdate =}}</ref> Mary Walter and her two children remained in Terre Haute until 1884, when the family moved to [[Indianapolis]], [[Indiana]]. From 1885 until 1889 Ada attended [[Shortridge High School|Indianapolis High School]], which was renamed Shortridge High School in 1897, and began to develop her artistic talents.<ref name=Sunlight16/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue70">{{cite book|author=Judith Vale Newton and Carol Ann Weiss|title=Skirting the Issue: Stories of Indiana's Historical Women Artists|date=2004|location=Indianapolis|page=70|publisher=Indiana Historical Society Press|isbn=0-87195-177-0}}</ref><ref name="internetantiquegazette.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/paintings/1884_shulz_ada_walter_american_artist/|title=Shulz, Ada Walter (American 1870-1928) | work = | publisher =Internet Antique Gazette|website=www.internetantiquegazette.com|accessdate=8 May 2017}}</ref> Walter later credited [[Roda Selleck]], the head of the school's art department, as the first person to inspire her interest in drawing.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.askart.com/artist/Roda_Selleck/5048587/Roda_Selleck.aspx |title=Roda Selleck (1847-1924) |publisher= |date= |website=www.askart.com|accessdate=8 May 2017}}</ref>
Ada Walter was born on October 21, 1870, in [[Terre Haute, Indiana]]. She was the daughter of Mary and John M. Walter, who had established a stone masonry and marble business and was also described as an architect. Ada's younger brother, Allen, was born when she was about two years old. Her father died of [[diphtheria]] in January 1873, before she was three years old.<ref name="fineestateart.com">{{cite web|url=http://fineestateart.com/artists/ada_walter_shulz |title=Artists :: Ada Walter Shulz |publisher=Fine Estate Art |date=1918-12-12 |access-date=2017-05-08}}</ref><ref name=Tradition431>{{cite book | author=Judith Vale Newton | author2=Carol Weiss | name-list-style=amp | title =A Grand Tradition: The Arts and Artists of the Hoosier Salon, 1925–1990 | publisher =Hoosier Salon Patrons Association | year =1993 | location =Indianapolis, Indiana | page =431 | isbn =9780963836007}}</ref><ref name=Sunlight16>{{cite journal| author=Rachel Perry| title =Children and Sunlight: The Life and Work of Ada Walter Shulz | journal =Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History | volume =10 | pages =16| publisher =Indiana Historical Society | location =Indianapolis | date =Winter 1993}}</ref> Mary Walter and her two children remained in Terre Haute until 1884, when the family moved to [[Indianapolis]], [[Indiana]]. From 1885 until 1889 Ada attended [[Shortridge High School|Indianapolis High School]], which was renamed Shortridge High School in 1897, and began to develop her artistic talents.<ref name=Sunlight16/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue70">{{cite book|author=Judith Vale Newton|author2=Carol Ann Weiss|name-list-style=amp|title=Skirting the Issue: Stories of Indiana's Historical Women Artists|date=2004|location=Indianapolis|page=70|publisher=Indiana Historical Society Press|isbn=0-87195-177-0}}</ref><ref name="internetantiquegazette.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/paintings/1884_shulz_ada_walter_american_artist/|title=Shulz, Ada Walter (American 1870-1928) | publisher =Internet Antique Gazette|website=www.internetantiquegazette.com|access-date=8 May 2017}}</ref> Walter later credited [[Roda Selleck]], the head of the school's art department, as the first person to inspire her interest in drawing.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.askart.com/artist/Roda_Selleck/5048587/Roda_Selleck.aspx |title=Roda Selleck (1847-1924) |website=www.askart.com|access-date=8 May 2017}}</ref>


After her brother's death in December 1888 and her graduation from high school in 1889, Ada and her mother moved to Chicago, Illinois. From 1889 to 1893 Ada took lessons at the [[Art Institute of Chicago]], where her instructors included [[John Vanderpoel]], [[Oliver Dennett Grover]], Frederick Freer, A. Kellogg, C. Wade, and [[Lorado Taft]].Her mother died in 1892, when Ada was twenty-one.<ref name=Sunlight16/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue70"/>
After her brother's death in December 1888 and her graduation from high school in 1889, Ada and her mother moved to Chicago, Illinois. From 1889 to 1893 Ada took lessons at the [[Art Institute of Chicago]], where her instructors included [[John Vanderpoel]], [[Oliver Dennett Grover]], Frederick Freer, A. Kellogg, C. Wade, and [[Lorado Taft]]. Her mother died in 1892, when Ada was twenty-one.<ref name=Sunlight16/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue70"/>


Ada Walter met [[Delavan, Wisconsin]], native and fellow artist [[Adolph Shulz]] in 1892, when she summered in Delavan as an art student with Vanderpoel's class.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name="Levy2004">{{cite book|author=Hannah Heidi Levy|title=Famous Wisconsin Artists and Architects|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mLuiKdgFfUwC&pg=PA87 |year=2004|publisher=Badger Books Inc.|isbn=978-1-932542-12-7|pages=85–87}}</ref> Two weeks after their marriage in September 1894, the Shulzes sailed to [[Paris]], [[France]], where Ada studied at the [[Académie Vitti]] in under [[Luc-Olivier Merson]] and [[Raphaël Collin]]. Adolph studied at [[Académie Julian]] and the [[Académie Colarossi]].<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue71">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', p. 71.</ref><ref name=GS311-12>{{cite book | author=Linda C. Gugin and James E. St. Clair, eds. | title =Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State | publisher =Indiana Historical Society Press| year =2015 | location =Indianapolis | pages=311–12 | url = | isbn =978-0-87195-387-2}}</ref><ref name=Sunlight17>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 17.</ref>
Ada Walter met [[Delavan, Wisconsin]], native and fellow artist [[Adolph Shulz]] in 1892, when she summered in Delavan as an art student with Vanderpoel's class.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name="Levy2004">{{cite book|author=Hannah Heidi Levy|title=Famous Wisconsin Artists and Architects|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mLuiKdgFfUwC&pg=PA87 |year=2004|publisher=Badger Books Inc.|isbn=978-1-932542-12-7|pages=85–87}}</ref> Two weeks after their marriage in September 1894, the Shulzes sailed to Paris, where Ada studied at the [[Académie Vitti]] under [[Luc-Olivier Merson]] and [[Raphaël Collin]]. Adolph studied at [[Académie Julian]] and the [[Académie Colarossi]].<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue71">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', p. 71.</ref><ref name=GS311-12>{{cite book |editor=Linda C. Gugin and James E. St. Clair| title =Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State | publisher =Indiana Historical Society Press| year =2015 | location =Indianapolis | pages=311–12 | isbn =978-0-87195-387-2}}</ref><ref name=Sunlight17>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 17.</ref>


The couple had one son, Walter, who was born on June 10, 1895. After returning to the United States later that fall, the family settled in Delavan, Wisconsin, where they remained for the next twenty years. Adolph supported the family as a landscape painter and art educator, while Ada became a full-time wife and mother. She did not paint for the next ten years.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name=Sunlight17/>
The couple had one son, Walter, who was born on June 10, 1895. After returning to the United States later that fall, the family settled in Delavan, Wisconsin, where they remained for the next twenty years. Adolph supported the family as a landscape painter and art educator, while Ada became a full-time wife and mother. She did not paint for the next ten years.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name=Sunlight17/>


==Career==
==Career==
[[File:Mother and Child, by Ada Walter Shulz.jpg|thumb|Mother and child, by Ada Walter Shulz. Original painting owned by the Municipal Art League, Chicago. Digitized by the Allen County Public Library. Shulz won a Chicago Art Piece purchase prize for this painting in 1917.]]
Shulz resumed painting around 1905. She also began regularly exhibiting her work at the Art Institute of Chicago and elsewhere in elsewhere in the Midwest. Shulz's painting, ''The Picture Book'', won an Art Institute award in 1916 and her painting, ''Mother and Child'', won a Chicago Art League purchase price in 1917. She also had paintings selected for magazine covers for ''Woman's Home Companion'' (January 1920) and ''Literary Digest'' (January 17, 1925).<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue73-324-25">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 73 and 324–25.</ref><ref>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," pp. 18, 20–21.</ref>
Shulz resumed painting around 1905. She also began regularly exhibiting her work at the Art Institute of Chicago and elsewhere in elsewhere in the Midwest. Shulz's painting, ''The Picture Book'', won an Art Institute award in 1916 and her painting, ''Mother and Child'', won a Chicago Art League purchase price in 1917. She also had paintings selected for magazine covers for ''Woman's Home Companion'' (January 1920) and ''Literary Digest'' (January 17, 1925).<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue73-324-25">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 73 and 324–25.</ref><ref>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," pp. 18, 20–21.</ref>


The Shulz family began summering in [[Brown County, Indiana|Brown County]], Indiana, in 1908, and in 1917 chose to move there permanently.<ref name=Sunlight19>Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 19.</ref> Ada and Adolph Shulz built a home on land they purchased on Hoop Pole Ridge in Nashville, Indiana|Nashville]] and members of the [[Brown County Art Colony]]. Adolph painted local landscapes while Ada focused on painting scenes of Brown County's mothers and children. She was also active in organizing the local Christian Science Society and Nashville's public library. Adolph and Ada Shulz were founding members of the Brown County Art Gallery Association in 1926.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name="Levy2004"/><ref name=Sunlight20>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 20.</ref><ref>Rachel Berenson Perry, "Introduction: An American Art Colony" in Letsinger-Miller and Perry, ''The Artists of Brown County'', p. xxv.</ref> The couple were also members of the Chicago chapter of the Society of Western Artists.<ref name=GS311-12/> In addition to regularly exhibiting her work at the Brown County Art Gallery, Ada's painting were displayed at the annual Hoosier Salon art shows from 1925 through 1930. She won Hoosier Salon prizes for ''A Mother from the Hills'' in 1926 and ''The Pet Duck'' in 1928.<ref name=Sunlight20/><ref>Newton and Weiss, ''A Grand Tradition'', p. 297.</ref>
The Shulz family began summering in [[Brown County, Indiana|Brown County]], Indiana, in 1908, and in 1917 chose to move there permanently.<ref name=Sunlight19>Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 19.</ref> Ada and Adolph Shulz built a home on land they purchased on Hoop Pole Ridge in [[Nashville, Indiana|Nashville]] and were members of the [[Brown County Art Colony]]. Adolph painted local landscapes while Ada focused on painting scenes of Brown County's mothers and children. She was also active in organizing the local Christian Science Society and Nashville's public library. Adolph and Ada Shulz were founding members of the Brown County Art Gallery Association in 1926.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/><ref name="Levy2004"/><ref name=Sunlight20>Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 20.</ref><ref>Rachel Berenson Perry, "Introduction: An American Art Colony" in Letsinger-Miller and Perry, ''The Artists of Brown County'', p. xxv.</ref> The couple were also members of the Chicago chapter of the Society of Western Artists.<ref name=GS311-12/> In addition to regularly exhibiting her work at the Brown County Art Gallery, Ada's painting were displayed at the annual Hoosier Salon art shows from 1925 through 1930. She won Hoosier Salon prizes for ''A Mother from the Hills'' in 1926 and ''The Pet Duck'' in 1928.<ref name=Sunlight20/><ref>Newton and Weiss, ''A Grand Tradition'', p. 297.</ref>


===Artistic style===
===Artistic style===
Shulz favored painting outdoors throughout her career, and was particularly receptive to the effects of light.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/> Unlike most of the [[Brown County Art Colony]], who were primarily landscape painters, the major themes and subject matter of her [[Impressionism|Impressionistic]] style were mothers, children, and barnyard animals.<ref name="Levy2004"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.adawshulz.com/|title=Ada W. Shulz | publisher =Indiana Art Collector |website=www.adawshulz.com|accessdate=8 May 2017}}</ref>
Shulz favored painting outdoors throughout her career, and was particularly receptive to the effects of light.<ref name="internetantiquegazette.com"/> Unlike most of the [[Brown County Art Colony]], who were primarily landscape painters, the major themes and subject matter of her [[Impressionism|Impressionistic]] style were mothers, children, and barnyard animals.<ref name="Levy2004"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.adawshulz.com/|title=Ada W. Shulz | publisher =Indiana Art Collector |website=www.adawshulz.com|access-date=8 May 2017}}</ref>


==Later years==
==Later years==
Ada and Adolph Shulz's son, Walter, began developing a career as an artist in Delavan, Wisconsin, prior to his enlistment and assignment to the Sixteenth Infantry, First Division, in France. Although he survived the fighting during World War I, Walter volunteered for occupation duty and died of diphtheria on December 12, 1918, after a hiking and sketching trip through the German countryside.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name=GS311-12/><ref name=Sunlight20/> Walter's death and grief over their loss caused the couple to grow apart. The marriage became even more strained in 1921 after Adolph became the art teacher of Alberta Rhem Miller and allowed her and her young daughter to stay at the Shulz home in Nashville. In 1924 Adolph moved into a separate cabin with Alberta. Adolph and Ada Schulz divorced on September 30, 1926. Adolph married Alberta within a month of his divorce from Ada.<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue77-79">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 77 and 79.</ref><ref name=Sunlght21>Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 21.</ref>
Ada and Adolph Shulz's son, Walter, began developing a career as an artist in Delavan, Wisconsin, prior to his enlistment and assignment to the Sixteenth Infantry, First Division, in France. Although he survived the fighting during World War I, Walter volunteered for occupation duty and died of diphtheria on December 12, 1918, after a hiking and sketching trip through the German countryside.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name=GS311-12/><ref name=Sunlight20/> Walter's death and grief over their loss caused the couple to grow apart. The marriage became even more strained in 1921 after Adolph became the art teacher of Alberta Rhem Miller and allowed her and her young daughter to stay at the Shulz home in Nashville. In 1924 Adolph moved into a separate cabin with Alberta. Adolph and Ada Schulz divorced on September 30, 1926. Adolph married Alberta within a month of his divorce from Ada.<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue77-79">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 77 and 79.</ref><ref name=Sunlght21>Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 21.</ref>


After the breakup of her marriage, Shulz resumed painting and exhibitin her artwork. She also became active in the Indiana Artists Club; however, her health declined after a solo exhibition of her work was held at the ''Milwaukee Journal'' Art Gallery in March 1928. Due to her [[Christian Science|Christian Scientist]] faith, she refused to seek medical treatment and died two months later.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name=Sunlght21/>
After the breakup of her marriage, Shulz resumed painting and exhibiting her artwork. She also became active in the Indiana Artists Club; however, her health declined after a solo exhibition of her work was held at the ''Milwaukee Journal'' Art Gallery in March 1928. Due to her [[Christian Science|Christian Scientist]] faith, she refused to seek medical treatment and died two months later.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name=Sunlght21/>


==Death and legacy==
==Death and legacy==
Shulz died in [[Nashville, Indiana|Nashville]], the county seat of Brown County, on May 2, 1928, at the age of fifty-eight. The cause of her death is unknown, but is believed to have been cancer.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue324-25">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 324–25.</ref><ref name=GS311-12/> She is buried at Spring Grove Cemetery in Delavan, Wisconsin.<ref>{{findagrave|89478485|Ada Walter Shulz}}</ref>
Shulz died in [[Nashville, Indiana|Nashville]], the county seat of Brown County, on May 2, 1928, at the age of fifty-eight. The cause of her death is unknown, but is believed to have been cancer.<ref name="fineestateart.com"/><ref name="SkirtingTheIssue324-25">Newton and Weiss, ''Skirting the Issue'', pp. 324–25.</ref><ref name=GS311-12/>


Shulz was a founding member of the Brown County Gallery Association and a member of the Society of Western Artists.<ref name=Tradition431/> Shulz was a founding member of the Brown County Gallery Association and a member of the Society of Western Artists.<ref name=Tradition431/> Her work, primarily of people in rural settings, especially mothers and children, is held in many collections, including those of the [[Art Institute of Chicago]]; [[Haan Mansion Museum of Indiana Art]]; the [[Indianapolis Museum of Art]]; the [[Indiana State Museum]] and Historic Sites; the [[Ball State University]] Museum of Art; the Dailey Family Memorial Collection of Hoosier Art at [[Indiana University]]; the [[Brown County Art Gallery and Museum]]; and the [[Art Museum of Greater Lafayette]].<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue324-25"/>
Shulz was a founding member of the Brown County Gallery Association and a member of the Society of Western Artists.<ref name=Tradition431/> Her work, primarily of people in rural settings, especially mothers and children, is held in many collections, including those of the [[Art Institute of Chicago]]; [[Haan Mansion Museum of Indiana Art]]; the [[Indianapolis Museum of Art]]; the [[Indiana State Museum]] and Historic Sites; the [[Ball State University]] Museum of Art; the Dailey Family Memorial Collection of Hoosier Art at [[Indiana University]]; the [[Brown County Art Gallery and Museum]]; and the [[Art Museum of Greater Lafayette]].<ref name="SkirtingTheIssue324-25"/>

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
Shulz is the subject of a biography, '', by
Shulz is the subject of a biography, '', by
*{{cite book | author=Perry, Rachel Berenson , and Ada Walter Shulz | title =Children From the Hills: The Life and Work of Ada Walter Shulz | publisher =Unlimited Publications | series = | volume = | edition = | year =2001 | location =Bloomington, Indiana | pages = | url=http://www.unlimitedpublishing.com/perry/ | isbn =9781588320223}}
*{{cite book | author=Perry, Rachel Berenson | author2=Ada Walter Shulz | name-list-style=amp | title =Children From the Hills: The Life and Work of Ada Walter Shulz | publisher =Unlimited Publications | year =2001 | location =Bloomington, Indiana | url=http://www.unlimitedpublishing.com/perry/ | isbn =9781588320223}}
*{{cite journal| author=Shulz, Adolph Robert| title =The Story of the Brown County Art Colony
*{{cite journal| author=Shulz, Adolph Robert| title =The Story of the Brown County Art Colony
| journal =Indiana Magazine of History | volume =31 | issue =4 | pages =282–89 | publisher =Indiana University | location =Bloomington | date =December 1, 1925| url =https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/imh/article/view/6854| accessdate =March 25, 2019}}
| journal =Indiana Magazine of History | volume =31 | issue =4 | pages =282–89 | publisher =Indiana University | location =Bloomington | date =December 1, 1925| url =https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/imh/article/view/6854| access-date =March 25, 2019}}

==References==
{{reflist}}


{{authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Shulz, Ada Walter}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Shulz, Ada Walter}}
Line 44: Line 61:
[[Category:1928 deaths]]
[[Category:1928 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:20th-century American women artists]]
[[Category:20th-century American women painters]]
[[Category:American women painters]]
[[Category:People from Terre Haute, Indiana]]
[[Category:People from Terre Haute, Indiana]]
[[Category:People from Brown County, Indiana]]
[[Category:People from Brown County, Indiana]]
Line 53: Line 69:
[[Category:School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni]]
[[Category:School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni]]
[[Category:American Christian Scientists]]
[[Category:American Christian Scientists]]
[[Category:Shortridge High School alumni]]

Latest revision as of 18:30, 21 June 2024

Ada Walter Shulz
Born(1870-10-21)October 21, 1870
Terre Haute, Indiana, United States
DiedMay 2, 1928(1928-05-02) (aged 57)
Known forPainter
SpouseAdolph Shulz (m. 1894–1926)

Ada Walter Shulz (October 21, 1870 – May 2, 1928) was an American painter, whose Impressionistic painting style primarily featured themes of mothers, children, and barnyard animals. Her paintings won awards at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1916 and 1917 and the annual Hoosier Salon exhibitions of 1926 and 1928. Her paintings were also selected for magazine covers for Woman's Home Companion (January 1920) and Literary Digest (January 17, 1925). The Terre Haute, Indiana, native studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and at the Académie Vitti in Paris, France. In 1917 she moved from her longtime home in Delavan, Wisconsin, with her artist husband, Adolph Shulz, and son Walter, to the Brown County Art Colony in Nashville, Indiana. In 1926 she became a founding member of the Brown County Art Gallery Association in Nashville. She was also a member of the Chicago chapter of the Society of Western Artists. Her paintings are held in several collections, including those at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Indianapolis Museum of Art (Newfields), the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites, the Swope Art Museum, the Ball State University Museum of Art, the Dailey Family Memorial Collection of Hoosier Art at Indiana University, the Brown County Art Gallery and Museum, and the Art Museum of Greater Lafayette, among others.

Early life

[edit]

Ada Walter was born on October 21, 1870, in Terre Haute, Indiana. She was the daughter of Mary and John M. Walter, who had established a stone masonry and marble business and was also described as an architect. Ada's younger brother, Allen, was born when she was about two years old. Her father died of diphtheria in January 1873, before she was three years old.[1][2][3] Mary Walter and her two children remained in Terre Haute until 1884, when the family moved to Indianapolis, Indiana. From 1885 until 1889 Ada attended Indianapolis High School, which was renamed Shortridge High School in 1897, and began to develop her artistic talents.[3][4][5] Walter later credited Roda Selleck, the head of the school's art department, as the first person to inspire her interest in drawing.[6]

After her brother's death in December 1888 and her graduation from high school in 1889, Ada and her mother moved to Chicago, Illinois. From 1889 to 1893 Ada took lessons at the Art Institute of Chicago, where her instructors included John Vanderpoel, Oliver Dennett Grover, Frederick Freer, A. Kellogg, C. Wade, and Lorado Taft. Her mother died in 1892, when Ada was twenty-one.[3][4]

Ada Walter met Delavan, Wisconsin, native and fellow artist Adolph Shulz in 1892, when she summered in Delavan as an art student with Vanderpoel's class.[5][7] Two weeks after their marriage in September 1894, the Shulzes sailed to Paris, where Ada studied at the Académie Vitti under Luc-Olivier Merson and Raphaël Collin. Adolph studied at Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi.[8][9][10]

The couple had one son, Walter, who was born on June 10, 1895. After returning to the United States later that fall, the family settled in Delavan, Wisconsin, where they remained for the next twenty years. Adolph supported the family as a landscape painter and art educator, while Ada became a full-time wife and mother. She did not paint for the next ten years.[5][10]

Career

[edit]
Mother and child, by Ada Walter Shulz. Original painting owned by the Municipal Art League, Chicago. Digitized by the Allen County Public Library. Shulz won a Chicago Art Piece purchase prize for this painting in 1917.

Shulz resumed painting around 1905. She also began regularly exhibiting her work at the Art Institute of Chicago and elsewhere in elsewhere in the Midwest. Shulz's painting, The Picture Book, won an Art Institute award in 1916 and her painting, Mother and Child, won a Chicago Art League purchase price in 1917. She also had paintings selected for magazine covers for Woman's Home Companion (January 1920) and Literary Digest (January 17, 1925).[11][12]

The Shulz family began summering in Brown County, Indiana, in 1908, and in 1917 chose to move there permanently.[13] Ada and Adolph Shulz built a home on land they purchased on Hoop Pole Ridge in Nashville and were members of the Brown County Art Colony. Adolph painted local landscapes while Ada focused on painting scenes of Brown County's mothers and children. She was also active in organizing the local Christian Science Society and Nashville's public library. Adolph and Ada Shulz were founding members of the Brown County Art Gallery Association in 1926.[5][7][14][15] The couple were also members of the Chicago chapter of the Society of Western Artists.[9] In addition to regularly exhibiting her work at the Brown County Art Gallery, Ada's painting were displayed at the annual Hoosier Salon art shows from 1925 through 1930. She won Hoosier Salon prizes for A Mother from the Hills in 1926 and The Pet Duck in 1928.[14][16]

Artistic style

[edit]

Shulz favored painting outdoors throughout her career, and was particularly receptive to the effects of light.[5] Unlike most of the Brown County Art Colony, who were primarily landscape painters, the major themes and subject matter of her Impressionistic style were mothers, children, and barnyard animals.[7][17]

Later years

[edit]

Ada and Adolph Shulz's son, Walter, began developing a career as an artist in Delavan, Wisconsin, prior to his enlistment and assignment to the Sixteenth Infantry, First Division, in France. Although he survived the fighting during World War I, Walter volunteered for occupation duty and died of diphtheria on December 12, 1918, after a hiking and sketching trip through the German countryside.[1][9][14] Walter's death and grief over their loss caused the couple to grow apart. The marriage became even more strained in 1921 after Adolph became the art teacher of Alberta Rhem Miller and allowed her and her young daughter to stay at the Shulz home in Nashville. In 1924 Adolph moved into a separate cabin with Alberta. Adolph and Ada Schulz divorced on September 30, 1926. Adolph married Alberta within a month of his divorce from Ada.[18][19]

After the breakup of her marriage, Shulz resumed painting and exhibiting her artwork. She also became active in the Indiana Artists Club; however, her health declined after a solo exhibition of her work was held at the Milwaukee Journal Art Gallery in March 1928. Due to her Christian Scientist faith, she refused to seek medical treatment and died two months later.[1][19]

Death and legacy

[edit]

Shulz died in Nashville, the county seat of Brown County, on May 2, 1928, at the age of fifty-eight. The cause of her death is unknown, but is believed to have been cancer.[1][20][9]

Shulz was a founding member of the Brown County Gallery Association and a member of the Society of Western Artists.[2] Her work, primarily of people in rural settings, especially mothers and children, is held in many collections, including those of the Art Institute of Chicago; Haan Mansion Museum of Indiana Art; the Indianapolis Museum of Art; the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites; the Ball State University Museum of Art; the Dailey Family Memorial Collection of Hoosier Art at Indiana University; the Brown County Art Gallery and Museum; and the Art Museum of Greater Lafayette.[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Artists :: Ada Walter Shulz". Fine Estate Art. 1918-12-12. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
  2. ^ a b Judith Vale Newton & Carol Weiss (1993). A Grand Tradition: The Arts and Artists of the Hoosier Salon, 1925–1990. Indianapolis, Indiana: Hoosier Salon Patrons Association. p. 431. ISBN 9780963836007.
  3. ^ a b c Rachel Perry (Winter 1993). "Children and Sunlight: The Life and Work of Ada Walter Shulz". Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. 10. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society: 16.
  4. ^ a b Judith Vale Newton & Carol Ann Weiss (2004). Skirting the Issue: Stories of Indiana's Historical Women Artists. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. p. 70. ISBN 0-87195-177-0.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Shulz, Ada Walter (American 1870-1928)". www.internetantiquegazette.com. Internet Antique Gazette. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  6. ^ "Roda Selleck (1847-1924)". www.askart.com. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  7. ^ a b c Hannah Heidi Levy (2004). Famous Wisconsin Artists and Architects. Badger Books Inc. pp. 85–87. ISBN 978-1-932542-12-7.
  8. ^ Newton and Weiss, Skirting the Issue, p. 71.
  9. ^ a b c d Linda C. Gugin and James E. St. Clair, ed. (2015). Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. pp. 311–12. ISBN 978-0-87195-387-2.
  10. ^ a b Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 17.
  11. ^ Newton and Weiss, Skirting the Issue, pp. 73 and 324–25.
  12. ^ Perry, "Children and Sunlight," pp. 18, 20–21.
  13. ^ Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 19.
  14. ^ a b c Perry, "Children and Sunlight," p. 20.
  15. ^ Rachel Berenson Perry, "Introduction: An American Art Colony" in Letsinger-Miller and Perry, The Artists of Brown County, p. xxv.
  16. ^ Newton and Weiss, A Grand Tradition, p. 297.
  17. ^ "Ada W. Shulz". www.adawshulz.com. Indiana Art Collector. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  18. ^ Newton and Weiss, Skirting the Issue, pp. 77 and 79.
  19. ^ a b Perry, "Children and Sunlight, ", p. 21.
  20. ^ a b Newton and Weiss, Skirting the Issue, pp. 324–25.

Further reading

[edit]

Shulz is the subject of a biography, , by