Using the Cresson scholarship she traveled to Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, and France. In France, she received tuition from Rene Menard and Lucien Simon at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière.[1]
Walter had a show at the Galleries George Petit in Paris in 1922. The French government purchased one of her works titled The Checquered Cape.[7]
She was lauded in her early career for her "intimate portrayal of little children" in paintings such as The Picnic and A Parasol Tea, which were noted particularly for her use of color.[5]
Brittany family by Martha Walter
English Nurse by Martha Walter (b&w reprint)
A Parasol Tea by Martha Walter (b&w reprint)
The Picnic by Martha Walter (b&w reprint)
La Plage by Martha Walter (b&w reprint)
In the 1930s, Walter traveled to North Africa and began to paint the market places of Tunis, Tripoli and Algiers.[8] The African sun offered a different lighting than her usual scenes in America and France.
After returning to New England, she set up a studio in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where she often painted beach scenes. She went on to teach art at Chase's New York School of Art.[8] She often lived with one of her sisters, and sometimes traveled in the summer with Alice Schille, who she had met as an art student.[9] She was also good friends with designer Zerelda Rains, who she met at Chase's Shinnecock Hills Summer School of Art in 1896.[10] The two women worked and traveled together on and off over the next twenty years, including at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts, successor to the Chase School of Art.[11]
Her estate was purchased in the late 1960s by the David David Gallery of Philadelphia. Walter continued working until a few years before her death in 1976 at age 100.[2]
Recognition
Walter's 1922 painting The Telegram, Detention Room (Ellis Island) was included in the inaugural exhibition of the National Museum of Women in the Arts, American Women Artists 1830-1930, in 1987.[12]
Retrospectives showcasing her work include
Martha Walter, at the George Thomas Hunter Museum of Art, Chattanooga, TN in 1953; Martha Walter, Hammer Galleries, New York, NY, in 1974–1975; and Impressionist Jewels: The Painting of Martha Walter, A Retrospective, at the Woodmere Art museum in 2002.[13][9]
Further reading
Alterman, James M. (2005). New hope for American art : a comprehensive showing of important 20th century painting from and surrounding the New Hope art colony. Lambertville, NJ: Jims of Lambertville. ISBN0-9772665-0-8.
William H. Gerdts. "Martha Walter—A Retrospective." American Art Review, September/October 2002, Vol. 14 Issue 5, p150-192.