Natalie Henry

Artist Gallery Back To Directory

Artist Details

  • Natalie
  • Smith
  • Henry
  • Henry
  • n/a
  • January 4, 1907
  • Malvern, Arkansas
  • February 20, 1992
  • Malvern, Arkansas
  • 1928-1985: Tree Studios Building, Chicago, Illinois (with Rowena Fry some of that time)

    1985-1992: Malvern, Arkansas
  • Chicago, Illinois

    Malvern, Arkansas
  • Tree Studio Building, Chicago, Illinois
  • Block Printer, Graphic Artist, Muralist, Painter-Oil
  • 1922-?: correspondence course in art
    1925-1926: Galloway Women’s College, Searcy, Arkansas
    1929-1932: School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
    graduated 1937: Hubert Ropp School of Art, Chicago, Illinois
  • Array
  • 1935: Annual Exhibition of Works by Chicago Artists, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois: Picnic, watercolor

    1936:  Annual Exhibition of Works by Chicago Artists, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois: Man with Shells

    Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois annual exhibits

    1944-1987: Chicago Society of Artists, Chicago, Illinois

    Chicago Women’s Salon, Chicago, Illinois

    Renaissance Society, Chicago, Illinois
  • Harlan Berk Collection, Chicago, Illinois

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC

    Chicago History Museum, Chicago, Illinois

    Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

    Shiloh Museum of Ozark History, Springdale, Arkansas
  • Chicago Society of Artists, Chicago, Illinois

    Chicago Women's Salon, Chicago, Illinois

    Renaissance Society, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
  • Natalie S. Henry and Rowena Fry Papers, 1927-1987, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
  • 1931-1942: typist, Ryerson Library, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

    1942-1943: secretary, Office of Price Administration-Rent Division

    1943-1948: commercial artist

    1949-1972: Manager, Store, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

    Department of Treasury muralist, Springfield, Arkansas
  • biography on Modernism in the New City website, Bernard Friedman Collection

    biography available at Wikipedia