Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones 1885-1968
For the most part, the impressionistic phase in Sparhawk-Jones's career was over shortly after the 1913 Armory Show. When she once again submitted works to national exhibitions in 1926, after a prolonged illness, one of these was sufficiently distinctive to have received the Kohnstamm Prize in Chicago. In 1938, one observer accounted for two distinct trends in the oeuvre of Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones. By this time her work had changed from a forceful impressionism of her first period; as she continued, her pictures became progressively introspective, mystically symbolic with a radical departure from tradition. Henry McBride saw and referred to these paintings as "imaginative compositions of fire and smoke and drifting clouds." Sparhawk-Jones took part in the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco in 1939, and in 1956, when her first one-woman show was held at Frank Rehn Gallery, her painting concept, mood, and subject matter had been transformed considerably. Later a modern art historian referred to their style as one that "verged on expressionistic violence." Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones continued her imaginative ventures in painting, gaining the quiet admiration of Marsden Hartley and a select group of collectors who purchased her work, but it is her early impressionist style that has awakened a renewed interest in her oeuvre. She died in 1968.