Mary Ellen Sigsbee (1876–1960) was an American artist and magazine illustrator.
Mary Ellen Sigsbee | |
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![]() 1899 portrait sketch | |
Born | February 26, 1876 New Orleans, Louisiana, United States |
Died | 1960 (aged 83–84) Woodstock, New York, United States |
Occupation | Painter, illustrator, artist |
Spouse(s) | William Balfour Ker, Anton Otto Fischer |
Parent(s) | |
Sigsby was born in New Orleans,[1] on February 26, 1876,[2] one of four daughters of Charles D. Sigsbee, who had been captain of the USS Maine during the Spanish–American War.[3][4]
Sigsbee studied at the Arts Students League.[5] One of her paintings was exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1908 - a feat achieved by few American women.[5]
A feminist and suffragist, Sisgbee designed posters for the American Woman Suffrage Association.[5][1] One of which, What breaks up the home? What will save the home? Votes for Women (circa 1917), is in the privately-held Ann Lewis Women's Suffrage Collection.[6]
From 1909 to 1917, and from 1930 to 1932, she made illustrations for the Evening Journal.[5][7][failed verification] Her painting The Christmas Peek was used as the Christmas 1934 cover of the Saturday Evening Post.[7][failed verification] She also produced work for Harper's Magazine.[8]
A copy of her print The New Hand is in the National Child Labor Committee Collection of the United States Library of Congress.[9]
Sigsbee was married twice. Her first marriage was to William Balfour Ker,[7] a fellow artist and socialist. The marriage was conducted against her father's wishes, after an 1898 elopement.[3] They first lived in Greenwich Village, but after a period working in Paris, the marriage failed[3] and they divorced in 1910.[7] They had a son, David (1906–1922).[10]
In 1912 she married the magazine illustrator Anton Otto Fischer.[7][failed verification][10] They first lived in Bushnellsville, New York before moving to a house near the intersection of Elmendorf Street and Ten Broeck Avenue in nearby Kingston (the house still stands). They had a daughter, Katrina Sigsbee Fischer (1914–1998). The family eventually settled into a house off Glasco Turnpike in Woodstock, New York just prior to World War II.[11]
Sigsbee and both husbands were former students of illustrator Howard Pyle.[10] Her son David was adopted by Fischer.[10] During her marriages she used the names Sigsbee Ker and Sigsbee Fischer.[7][failed verification]
Sigsbee died in 1960, at Woodstock.[1][4]
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