John Singer Sargent, a family friend,[6] inspired Fairchild to become an artist.[7] She wrote of her recollections of a visit to the Louvre with Sargent.[8][a]
An 1890 self-portrait demonstrates Fairchild's artistic abilities at age 18.[11] She also did a portrait of her brother Blair Fairchild at the piano in 1891.[11] Fairchild intended initially to paint murals, and was commissioned in 1893 to do one of six individual murals for the Woman's Building at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, along with Lydia Emmet, Mary Cassatt, and Mary Fairchild MacMonnies.[12] Her chosen subject was female New England settlers, and was titled The Women of Plymouth. It was considered a significant commission.[12]
After a multi-year love affair, Fairchild married in 1893 her fellow student, the American painter Henry Brown Fuller. After she became pregnant, the immediate need to provide financial support for her family was pressing. Her father had recently lost his fortune in Boston, and she had married against his wishes.[6] Pregnant with her first child, she turned to portraiture, and produced chiefly miniatures. Her husband made it clear he was above the pursuit of money for his art.[6] Fairchild Fuller resorted to living in a dark and small room in New York City, using her significant social connections to contract for commissions, producing nearly two hundred by 1903.[6]
The Fullers had two children, Clara Bertram, born in 1895, and Charles, born in 1897.[b] In 1897, they purchased a home in Plainfield, New Hampshire, and were active members of the Cornish Art Colony.[c] Fairchild Fuller's brother, "Jack" John Cummings Fairchild, married the painter Francis C. Lyons Houston's daughter, Charlotte Fairchild, in 1898.[20]
The couple became estranged in 1901. Fairchild Fuller was portrayed in a 1902 painting, variously titled The Spinet, or Lady and Spinet, or Lady Playing Harpsichord, or Portrait of Lucia, by Cornish Colony founder and painter, Thomas Wilmer Dewing. Dewing executed a nearly identical "partner" painting of her that summer.[19] In 1905, Fairchild Fuller became separated from her husband, who returned to his family home in Deerfield, Massachusetts to live with his mother, Agnes Higginson Fuller. They remained owners of their home in Plainfield, and continued to spend time in the area, often renting the home to other artists, including Ethel Barrymore and the Zorachs.[21]
In 1905, Fairchild Fuller painted a second self-portrait, In the Looking Glass, a 6 x 4 inch watercolor on ivory, wherein she depicted herself as a mature woman with eyeglasses, looking directly at the viewer. The work, owned by Fairchild Fuller's family, was included in the 1987 publication American Women Artists, 1830-1930, by Eleanor Tufts, one of the first publications by the newly opened National Museum of Women in the Arts.[22] Fairchild Fuller moved to New York City, where she taught at the Art Students League in the years 1910-11 and 1914-15. The only school specializing in miniature painting in New York City, The American School of Miniature Painting, operated from 1914 to 1924. Fairchild Fuller taught alongside the artist Elsie D. Pattee and trained the Texan artist Elsie Motz Lowdon.[17]
In 1920, Fairchild Fuller published an article about her friend from the Cornish Art Colony, the sculptor, Frances Grimes.[23] They were the same age, had arrived in Cornish about the same time, and had shared a decade of experience in the Cornish Colony.[17]
Fairchild Fuller's recurrent illness forced her to return to her father's family hometown, Madison, Wisconsin in 1918.[1] She died there of multiple sclerosis on May 21, 1924, at the age of 51.[15][24]
^Fairchild Fuller's recollections are available in manuscript at Dartmouth College Special Collections.
^A photograph taken of Lucia and Clara posing for Henry Brown Fuller's 1900 painting, Illusions, is included in the large collection of Fairchild Fuller papers at Dartmouth College.[18] The final painting includes the figures of Lucia and Clara in the foreground, barely clad, and Mount Ascutney, with one of the many newly built Cornish Colony homes, in the background.[19]
^After a devastating fire in 1899, they rebuilt the main house and added tennis courts and a swimming pool.[20]
^Miller, Lucia (1986). "John Singer Sargent in the Diaries of Lucia Fairchild 1890 and 1891". Archives of American Art Journal. 26 (4): 2–16. doi:10.1086/aaa.26.4.1557205. S2CID191909563 – via www.jstor.org/stable/1557205. Accessed 24 Feb. 2021.
^The Fairchild-Fuller Papers in the Dartmouth College Library. Hanover, N.H: [The Library], 1981. Print.
^A Circle of Friends:Art Colonies of Cornish and Dublin. Durham, New Hampshire: University of New Hampshire. 1985. p. 88.
^ abGilbert, Alma (2003). The Women of the Cornish Colony, Part II. Cornish, NH: Cornish Colony Gallery & Museum. p. 26.
^ abGarfinkle, Charlene G. (1993). "Lucia Fairchild Fuller's "Lost" Woman's Building Mural". American Art. 7 (1): 2–7. doi:10.1086/424173. S2CID191289722.
^Fielding, Mantle (1974). Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors and Engravers, Enlarged Edition. Greens Farms, CT: Modern Books and Crafts, Inc. pp. 130–131. ISBN0-913274-03-8.
^ abZea, Philip (1991). Choice White Pines and Good Land. A History of Plainfield and Meriden, New Hampshire. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Peter E. Randall Publisher. p. 346.
^Colby, Virginia (2010). Footprints of the Past: Images of Cornish, New Hampshire. Cornish, New Hampshire: Cornish Historical Society, Cornish, New Hampshire. p. 207. ISBN978-0-915916-22-1.