Molly Luce

[1] Further study followed at the Art Students League of New York under F. Luis Mora, George Bellows, and Kenneth Hayes Miller.

[2] At the completion of her schooling in 1922–23, Luce traveled Europe, visiting France, Switzerland and Italy.

In 1929 they moved to the suburb of Belmont, and in 1942 they purchased the house Threeways in Little Compton, Rhode Island, where both she and her husband died.

[2] In 1966 twenty of her paintings were exhibited in a one-woman show celebrating the 50th anniversary of the graduation of Wheaton's class of 1916.

[1] Luce was described by critic Henry McBride as "the American Breughel", and her early style is reminiscent of that of Charles Burchfield; later paintings take a Precisionist approach.