Creator Record
Metadata
Name |
Sutton, Margaret |
Other names |
Margaret Elisabeth Sutton |
Dates & places of birth and death |
b. 1905 Abingdon, VA d. 1990 New York City, NY |
Nationality |
American |
Occupation |
Art Teacher, Assistant Professor of Art, Textile Designer, Drafter, Technical Illustrator |
Notes |
Artist Gallery group shows, 1948, 1949 Exhibition of the Mamie Padgett Collection at the Porter Art Gallery, Georgia State Teachers College, Milledgeville, GA, 1958 Tanzer (sp?) Gallery group show, 1966 Audubon Artists Annual, National Academy Galleries, New York Annual National Exhibitions of the Painters and Sculptors Society of New Jersey, 1971-1979 |
Relationships |
Lived with Alfred and Gertrude Levitt. Studied with Kimon Nicolaides at Art Students' League, 1932. Studied with Robert Brackman at the Art Students' League, 1934. Studied with Morris Kantor at the Art Students' League, 1934. Studied painting with Hans Hofmann, 1936-37. Studied creative design with Mary Werter at Universal School of Handicrafts, NYC, 1937. |
Places of residence |
Abingdon, VA; Winston-Salem, NC; Milledgeville, GA; New York City, NY |
Role |
Artist |
Education |
Normal Professional Certificate, East Radford State Teachers' College, 1922-1924 B.S. Art Education, Mary Washington College, 1926 Summer Session, Teachers' College, Columbia University, 1928 Teachers' College, Columbia University, 1929-1930 M.A. Fine Arts Education, Teachers' College, Columbia University, 1930 Applied Art Study Tour to Europe, 1932 Art Students League, July 1931- 1934 New York School of Interior Decoration, coursework, 1934 Education and Drafting courses, Columbia University, 1942 Mechanical Drafting intensive training course at Columbia University, 1942 Aircraft Structural Layout with Engineering Science, Management War Training at Columbia University, 1943 Applied Descriptive Geometry for Aircraft Drafting with Engineering, Scienceand Management War Training at the City College of the City of New York, 1943. Coursework at New York University and City College, 1950s |