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Margaret Overbeck |
Hannah Overbeck | Elizabeth
Overbeck | Mary Francis Overbeck
- Overbeck, Margaret (1863-1911)
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As the guiding spirit for the Overbeck Studios, Margaret studied at
the Cincinnati Art Academy under J. H. Sharp, L. H. Meakin, Lewis Cass
Lutz (Cambridge City native), Vincent Nowattny, and Otto W. Beck as well
as from Arthur Wesley Dow and Marshall Fry of Columbia Univeristy. She
would teach at the Sayre Institute in Lexington, Kentucky and at the
Megguier Seminary in Boonville, Missouri. She would be the one to provide
early instruction to her sisters before they attended art schools. From
1899 to 1911, Margaret taught drawing, watercolor and china painting at
DePauw University, Greencastle Indiana. In August of 1907, she suffered
severe head injuries from an automobile accident in Chicago. During that
period, while home recovering, she organized and taught classes in
Richmond. Later she worked as a decorator at Zanesville Art Pottery in
1910 and returned to Cambridge City after the pottery factory burned.
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- From the start, Margaret’s goal for the studio was to concentrate on
originality and quality as opposed to quantity. The studio would be the
family home. Located at 520 East Church Street, the
two-story home is
still standing and is faithfully cared for by Jerry and Phyllis Mattheis.
The sisters did not have state of the art equipment, but rather simple and
primitive materials including a small motor driven potters wheel. The
sisters would do all of the work from design to firing. They adhered to
the ideals of the American Arts and Crafts Movement. Objects must be at
once simple, beautiful, functional and hand wrought.
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- Unfortunately, Margaret would never see the pottery studio develop.
She died in August 1911, believed as a result of her injuries from the
automobile accident in 1907. [Sources]
- Overbeck, Hannah (1870-1931)
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Hannah worked with her sister Ida in the photography studio in
Cambridge City before she attended the Indiana State Normal School
(Indiana State University) at Terre Haute, Indiana. After college, she was
a public school teacher at Clinton, Indiana before ill health forced her
to return home in 1903. Hannah is mostly recognized for her designs in
pencil and watercolor of plants, trees and insects. She contributed
numerous designs to Keramic Studio, 1904-1916.
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- The sister’s paintings and pottery won awards at expositions in Paris,
France; Baltimore, Maryland; San Francisco, California; and Chicago,
Illinois. Hannah and her sisters exhibited in the Arts and Crafts
Biennials at the Richmond Art Museum. [Sources]
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- Overbeck, Elizabeth (1875-1936)
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Elizabeth
studied under the famed ceramists, Charles Bins at the New York State
School of Claymaking and Ceramics, New York. She handled the technical
aspects of the pottery, including clay and glaze development and building
the wares on the wheel. It was her expertise that brought national
attention to her work.
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- In 1931, William Lowe Bryan, Indiana University President, asked
Elizabeth to establish a school of ceramics, which she declined. She was
instrumental in the execution of two twin vases and a set of five tiles
for the Public Works Administration in 1934. The twin vases are considered
some of the finest work created by the Overbeck’s and were displayed
nationally and in Paris, France.
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- Eight months before her death, she was awarded the highest honor as
ceramists, being named a Fellow in the American Ceramic Society in 1936. [Sources]
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Overbeck, Mary Francis (1878-1955)
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Mary Francis studied at the Cincinnati Art Academy, Summer Art School,
directed by Arthur Dow, Ipswich, Massachusetts, circa 1909. She taught
school in Boulder, Colorado, Centerville and Cambridge City, Indiana
before joining her sisters in the home studio. Mary Francis specialized in
decoration, finishing and glazing for the Overbeck Pottery Studio.
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- Mary Francis in particular showed a love for children in her work more
than any of the other sisters. For the children of Cambridge City, she made
and donated a
large galleon in full sail manned with pirate figurines to the
Cambridge City Public Library. She painted large oil paintings of children
including Speed Demons, School Children and The Road to Nowhere on display
at the Richmond Art Museum. In addition she painted a fond portrayal of
Virginia and Charles Overbeck playing in a sandbox on display in the
Overbeck Museum in Cambridge City. Her creations of bugs, spiders, dragons
and giraffes all appealed to children and adults alike.
- It is believed that she created thousands of pieces of pottery with her
three sisters. Pins and figurines were the main output in her later years.
She also got great enjoyment from painting her favorite subject, birds. She
continued to hand-mold, paint and glaze small pieces until her death in
1955. [Sources]
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Learn More About The Overbeck Sisters |
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Preferred Media:
Pottery,
Painting, Drawing
Additional
Information & Images:
Images
Articles
Museum Links
Miscellaneous
Sources:
Margaret Overbeck
Burnet, Mary Q. Art and Artists of Indiana. New York; The Century Co.,
1921.
Mattheis, Phyllis. Paper on Overbeck Sisters-Kathleen Postle Archive,
Richmond Art Museum
Newton, Judith Vale and Carol Weiss, Skirting the Issue: Stories of
Indiana’s Historical Women Artists. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana
Historical Society Press. 2004.
Postle, Kathleen R. The Chronicle of the Overbeck Pottery. Indianapolis;
Indiana Historical Society, 1978.
Hannah Overbeck
Burnet, Mary Q. Art and Artists of Indiana. New York; The Century Co.,
1921.
Mattheis, Phyllis. Paper on Overbeck Sisters-Kathleen Postle Archive,
Richmond Art Museum
Newton, Judith Vale and Carol Weiss, Skirting the Issue: Stories of
Indiana’s Historical Women Artists. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana
Historical Society Press. 2004.
Postle, Kathleen R. The Chronicle of the Overbeck Pottery. Indianapolis;
Indiana Historical Society, 1978.
Elizabeth Overbeck
Burnet, Mary Q. Art and Artists of Indiana. New York; The Century Co.,
1921.
Mattheis, Phyllis. Paper on Overbeck Sisters-Kathleen Postle Archive,
Richmond Art Museum
Newton, Judith Vale and Carol Weiss, Skirting the Issue: Stories of
Indiana’s Historical Women Artists. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana
Historical Society Press. 2004.
Postle, Kathleen R. The Chronicle of the Overbeck Pottery. Indianapolis;
Indiana Historical Society, 1978.
Mary Francis Overbeck
Burnet, Mary Q. Art and Artists of Indiana. New York; The Century Co.,
1921.
Kiss, Carl. The Use of Symbolism in Arts and Crafts Pottery: Discovering
a Hidden Overbeck Treasure, 1993.
Mattheis, Phyllis. Paper on Overbeck Sisters-Kathleen Postle Archive,
Richmond Art Museum
Palladium-Item and Sun-Telegram, May 30, 1948. Last of Famous Overbeck
Sisters Carries on Family’s Art Tradition.
Newton, Judith Vale and Carol Weiss, Skirting the Issue: Stories of
Indiana’s Historical Women Artists. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana
Historical Society Press. 2004.
Postle, Kathleen R. The Chronicle of the Overbeck Pottery. Indianapolis;
Indiana Historical Society, 1978.
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Photo Courtesy of the Cambridge City Public Library |
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