Adelaide Deming

[1][10] Deming's work included landscapes, such as those exhibited at Pratt Institute in 1901, where the Brooklyn Daily Eagle wrote "attracted the attention of visitors.

[12] The Los Angeles Herald wrote that her award-winning watercolor painting Moon Shadows was "full of the charm and mystery of moonlight.

"[13] Minna C. Smith wrote in The International Studio that Moonlight Shadows depicted a scene that was "alive with poetry, its own, yes, but also interpreted by the artist.

"[19] She traveled widely in Europe, the Caribbean, and Egypt, but her best-known works were her New England landscapes, frequently depicting scenes from her hometown.

[20][21] In 1915 she exhibited a group of paintings alongside pieces by Alice Schille, Helen Watson Phelps and Emma Lampert Cooper;[22][23] during her career she also showed at the National Academy of Design, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and the Brooklyn Museum, and she participated in the Panama Pacific Exposition in 1915.

Adelaide Deming
Black and white reproduction of Pottery and Jade by Adelaide Deming