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Marion Boyd Allen
(1862-1941)
Boston-bred, patrician portrait painter and landscapist Marion
Boyd Allen studied oil painting and watercolor at the Boston
Museum School under recognized artists Frank W. Benson, Philip
Hale and Edmund Tarbell. Allen’s facile brushwork in both media,
and her Impressionist coloration, ensured that her career would
rapidly advance, but it was put on hold while the dutiful daughter
cared for her ailing mother.
Then, in her early sixties, Marion Boyd Allen headed for the
Canadian Rockies and proceeded to scale and paint the mountains
with a new-found burst of creative energy. Mrs. Allen was not an
athletic woman, but that did not deter her from bumpy car- and
horseback rides into remote areas to capture on canvas Native
American chiefs and children, and the magical coloration of the
Grand Canyon and beyond.
Marion Boyd Allen’s favored vertical format paintings were
well received in Boston each year when she returned to the city, and
she soon was exhibiting her works at the National Academy of
Design in New York, the Pennsylvania Academy of Design in
Philadelphia, and the Art Institute in Chicago. Allen was also a
member of the National Association of Women Painters, and locally,
the Boston Art Club, the Guild of Boston Artists, and the Copley
Society.
Marion Boyd Allen’s painting
was included in the traveling exhibition The Bostonians: Painters of
an Elegant Age, 1870-1930, which premiered in 1986 at the Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston, and then at the Denver Art Museum and
Chicago’s Terra Museum of American Art. Now, over sixty years
later, her remarkable paintings and watercolors are appealing to a
new audience with a twenty-first century aesthetic sense.
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