Amy D. Flemming (September 10, 1876 – December 17, 1970), was a painter and professor of art, active in the San Francisco Bay Area from the early 1900s to the 1960s. She was born Amy Dewing in San Francisco, taking the name Flemming when she married Herbert Flemming, c. 1919.[1]
Flemming exhibited paintings, watercolors, pastels, and drawings in numerous venues including the San Francisco Art Association (from 1903 to at least 1948),[1][5] the Marin County Art Association (first prize in painting, 1927),[6] the California Art Club, Los Angeles, 1929,[7] from 1946 in shows at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor,[8] and from 1956 to 1957 at the Ruth White Gallery, New York.[9]
Two high points of her career were the exhibition Amy D. Flemming: Paintings at the San Francisco Museum of Art (now the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art) in 1940, and at the same institution the show Oils by Amy D. Flemming in 1942.[10][11][12][13]
In 1956, reviewing her show at the Ruth White Gallery in New York, ARTnews wrote that her oil paintings "use olive, deep black
and somber red to denote emotions
felt at witnessing the natural scene.
They have a rather grandiloquent,
Wagnerian quality."[14]
Flemming's painting Flowers, Birds, Children in the Field (1963) is in the collection of SFMOMA.[15] Her painting The Echo (by 1962) is in the collection of the San Francisco Art Institute.[16]
Walter, John I. "The San Francisco Art Association" in Art in California: a survey of American art with special reference to Californian painting, sculpture and architecture past and present, particularly as those arts were represented at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco: Bernier, R.L., 1916, pp. 97–101.