Blondelle Malone

[3] Malone spent time at the Cos Cob art colony where she continued to study with Twachtman.

[1] In 1963 a selection her papers were assembled into a biography by Louise Jones DuBose entitled Enigma : the career of Blondelle Malone in art and society, 1879-1951, as told in her letters and diaries.

[5] Her work was included in the 2016 exhibition Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection at the Morris Museum of Art.

[6] In 2020 her work was included in the traveling exhibition Central to Their Lives: Southern Women Artists in the Johnson Collection.

[7] In 2022 her work was included in the exhibition In the Shadow of Monet: Giverny and American Impressionism at the Columbia Museum of Art.

Garden with water lillies and fountain