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Lucile Lloyd, also known as Lucile Lloyd Brown, Lucila Lloyd Nulty (August 28, 1894 – February 25, 1941) was an American muralist, illustrator, and decorative painter. In 1937, Lloyd worked with the Works Progress Administration's Federal Arts Project to paint three murals in the assembly room in the state building in Los Angeles, California.


Early life

Lloyd was born in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her parents were Mary Alice (Holcomb) and Harry Kensington Lloyd. She apprenticed in her father's stained-glass and textile design studio. Her English grandfather was a textile designer during the Arts and Crafts movement. She attended school at the Woman's Art School at
Cooper Union The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art (Cooper Union) is a private college at Cooper Square in New York City. Peter Cooper founded the institution in 1859 after learning about the government-supported École Polytechnique in ...
in New York City and won two scholarships to the
Art Students League of New York The Art Students League of New York is an art school at 215 West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City, New York. The League has historically been known for its broad appeal to both amateurs and professional artists. Although artists may stu ...
. While at Cooper Union she studied with Frank Fairbanks,
Frederick Dielman Frederick Dielman (25 December 1847 – 15 August 1935) was a German-American portrait and figure painter. Biography Dielman was born in Hanover, Germany, and was taken to the United States in early childhood. He graduated from Elf Sternberg ...
, Robert Tyland, and Joseph C. Chase. She was the first woman to work in the drafting room of architect
Bertram G. Goodhue Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue (April 28, 1869 – April 23, 1924) was an American architect celebrated for his work in Gothic Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival architecture, Spanish Colonial Revival design. He also designed notable typefaces, in ...
and painted her first mural decoration at the age of twenty. In 1919 Lloyd married Addison Brown II, son of Addison Brown. They had one child, Addison Brown III.


Career

Lloyd moved with her husband and son to California in 1919. She opened a studio, taught classes and took the role of directorship of the
Stickney Memorial Art School Stickney Memorial Art School, also known as Stickney Art Institute and Stickney Memorial School of Fine Arts, was an art school in operation between c.1912 until 1934 in Pasadena, California. The school was an early precursor to the Norton Simon ...
in Pasadena. Lloyd worked as a muralist and decorator and also produced bookplates, cartoons, logos, water color, charcoal, architectural renderings and stained-glass designs. She worked with many well-known architectural firms including Howard Hewitt, Marsh, Smith, and Powell, Carleton Monroe Wilson, and the West Coast office of Bertam Goodhue. In 1923, Lloyd contributed an article in the December issue of ''California Southland'' (pg. 14) entitled, ''The Relationship Between Architecture and Decoration'', in which she acknowledges that while the architect has the vision, it is the interior specialist that brings together the decorative elements that complete a space. Lloyd mentions the need for time to research and create full scale working drawings as well as full color renderings. She goes on to stress that muralists such as herself be included from the onset of a project. "Bringing in an artist at the last minute can lead to a displeased client". "If the client could only be persuaded to put the money he spends, later, on landscapes or genre paintings which do not go with his house, into one good ceiling for over-mantel, which becomes a part of the architecture of his home, he would be better satisfied in the end." She closes her article by saying that while mural artists "speak the language of trade painters, murals artist are not to be confused with 'house painters'". In 1925, her spouse Addison Brown II divorced her and moved with their two-year-old child back to the
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. ''The Madonna of the Covered Wagon'' (1928) was a large mural completed at a middle school in south Pasadena. The scene recalls a journey made by thousands of pioneer families as they cam west during the 1800s. While the work was considered by some critics of the time as saccharine, it is typical of the ''Illustrators School'' which was the style of her time. Los Angeles Times art critic Arthur Millier gave the work high praise saying, "her delightful mural combines humor and sentiment in delightful proportions. Lloyd was one of six artists who submitted drawings for the murals at Griffith Observatory. She was a member of the California Art Club, Women Painters of the West, American Bookplate Society and the California State Historical Association. She married her second husband Niel McNulty in 1936, who died in 1939. Lucile Lloyd committed suicide in February 1941, "overcome by gas".


Commissioned artwork


Publications

A list of articles and essays penned by Lucile Lloyd about her mural work.


References

* "California's Name" - Three WPA sponsored Murals by Lucile Lloyd - published by California State Senate Rules Committee - January, 1992


External links


Lucile Lloyd papers, 1916-1941
from the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution *A Life In Mural
Lucile Lloyd · Lucile Lloyd: A Life in Murals · UCSB ADC Omeka
*Picturing California's Histor
Picturing California's History · Lucile Lloyd: A Life in Murals · UCSB ADC Omeka
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lloyd, Lucile American muralists American women painters 1894 births 1941 deaths Painters from California Artists from Los Angeles Artists from Cincinnati Art Students League of New York alumni Bertram Goodhue buildings Federal Art Project artists 20th-century American painters 20th-century American women artists Women muralists 1941 suicides Suicides by gas