Martha Walter, United States, (1875–1976), was a plein–air painter of landscapes and a
portraitist. Her paintings are characterized by bright, vivid colors and a white pigment
saturated with light. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she studied at the Pennsylvania
academy of Fine Arts and the Academic Julian in Paris.
Walter established her own studio on the Rue de Bagneaux with several other young
American women artists but returned home at the outset of World War I. In the U.S., Walter
set up studios in new York and Boston and pursued an international career, teaching at the
New York School of Art and in Brittany. [DES–4/07]
No pig, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, would conclude that it would also make better soup.