Ruth M. Erb Hoffman (1902 – May 9, 1968) was an American artist and sculptor, based in Buffalo, New York.
Ruth Erb Hoffman | |
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![]() Ruth Erb Hoffman, from the 1926 yearbook of Wellesley College | |
Born | 1902 Buffalo, New York, United States |
Died | May 9, 1968(1968-05-09) (aged 65–66) Ontario, Canada |
Occupation | Artist, sculptor, educator |
Ruth M. Erb was born in Buffalo, New York, the daughter of Lucius L. Erb and Henrietta (Hattie) Miller Erb. Her father was a real estate and insurance agent; he died in 1933.[1]
Erb graduated from Wellesley College in 1926.[2][3] She also studied at the Child-Walker School of Fine Arts and Crafts, and studied with artists Ann Brockman,[3] Edwin Walter Dickinson, Charles E. Burchfield, and Arthur Lee.[4]
Hoffman painted landscapes and still life compositions. In 1947 she had a joint show with fellow Buffalo artist Virginia Tillou, titled "Flower Variations".[5] "Mrs. Hoffman's palette is an unusually broad one," commented a reviewer. "She is particularly adept at representing flowers within the setting of a room, arranging them in skillful reference to a pair of chairs, a windowsill with a view beyond, a porch railing."[5] Another reviewer wrote, in 1950, that "Ruth Hoffman's landscapes have a radiance about them that could bring any dull and comfortless north room in which they were hung the brilliance of a conservatory."[6] In 1958, she had solo show of works based on her travels in Italy.[7] She exhibited her work at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Albright Art Gallery, the Carnegie Institute,[3][8] Miami Beach Art Gallery,[9] the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Riverside Art Museum, the Terry Art Institute, and the Sisti Galleries.[4]
She was an assistant art instructor at Wellesley in 1928.[3] In Buffalo, she worked from a studio over the garage at her mother's house on Main Street.[10] In 1933 she was one of the seven founders of the Patteran Society, a progressive artists' organization in Buffalo.[4][11] "You can look at something day after day and hardly notice it until one day when the light hits it in a different way—such as when a storm comes along—and makes it very beautiful," she explained in 1965.[12]
Ruth Erb married orthodontist Burton A. Hoffman in 1931. Her husband died in 1967,[13] and she died in a car accident in 1968, at the age of 66, at Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.[14] Her works are in the collection of the Burchfield Penney Art Center,[4] and the Dallas Museum of Art.[15]