Works by Fenton were shown at PAFA's annual exhibition most years from 1911 to 1964,[6] and she was awarded the George D. Widener Memorial Gold Medal in 1922 for Seaweed Fountain.[7] She was a member of the National Sculpture Society, and her Nereid Fountain was featured in the NSS exhibition of 1929.[8] A cast of Seaweed Fountain has been in the Brookgreen Gardens collection since 1934.[9]
Seaweed Fountain (1920–22), Brookgreen Gardens, Murrell's Inlet, South Carolina.
Evelyn Taylor Price Memorial Sundial (1947), Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Personal life
While studying at PAFA, Fenton met fellow artists Marjorie Martinet and Emily Clayton Bishop. Her relationship with Martinet lasted more than fifty years, and included the exchange of passionate letters.[10][11]
^James-Gadzinski, Susan; Cunningham, Mary Mullen (1997). American sculpture in the Museum of American Art of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 225. ISBN978-0295976921.
^The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Peter Hastings Falk, ed. (Sound View Press, 1989), vol. II, p. 194; vol. III, p. 181.
^National Sculpture Society (U.S.); California Palace of the Legion of Honor (1929). Contemporary American sculpture : the California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Lincoln Park, San Francisco, April to October 1929. New York, New York: National Sculpture Society, New York : Press of the Kalkhoff Company.