[7] Until they could find a larger place, they first lived in a one-room apartment in the Sherman Building in New York City.
[4] From 1911 to 1917, Dimock and her family spent the summers at Belport on Long Island, where her husband, William Glackens, painted beach scenes.
Dimock described her classes at the Art Students League: In a room innocent of ventilation, the job was to draw Venus (just the head) and her colleagues.
The women gathered with male artists from the Ashcan School, including William Glackens and James Moore Preston, at Mouquin's and Cafe Francis.
[7] In 1904 her works were shown at the American Water Color Society exhibition: Miss Dimock is not unorthodox at all.
She comes to her world very unconventionally, free from pictorial prejudice, and with a purpose which is not complicated by unsettled notions.
Here is an artist with a definite aim, a keen fresh vision.She made watercolor genre scenes "though charming, often displayed a caustic sense of humor.
[21] The Whitney Studio Club, led by women patrons, held a solo exhibition of Dimock's work.