Edith Lake Wilkinson

Advertisement

Edith Lake Wilkinson

Birth
Wheeling, Ohio County, West Virginia, USA
Death
19 Jul 1957 (aged 88)
Huntington, Cabell County, West Virginia, USA
Burial
Wheeling, Ohio County, West Virginia, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.0620666, Longitude: -80.6790655
Memorial ID
View Source
Edith was an artist who lived for awhile in New York and Provincetown. She was committed to an asylum in 1925 and remained there until her death. Her work was found packed in boxes in the attic of a relative. A documentary film is being made about her life and work. There are several websites and a facebook page dedicated to Edith.
------------------
BORN: August 23, 1868 in Wheeling, West Virginia

FATHER: James P. Wilkinson, an accountant and paymaster. He fought in the Civil War on the Union side under the command of his father, Colonel Nathan Wilkinson in the West Virginia Loyal Volunteers. (Apparently James had two nervous breakdowns during his life but it’s reported that he recovered).

MOTHER: Lucy Lake Atkinson Wilkinson, born in Edinburgh, Scotland. She was an art teacher. In a wedding announcement for her daughter Jane, she was referred to as “a talented and well-known artist.”

SISTER: Jane Plumley Wilkinson Vossler, born 1875.
----
Edith was an artist who lived and painted in Provincetown, Massachusetts during the early decades of the 20th century until she was committed to an asylum for the mentally ill in 1924 Wilkinson's life and work is highlighted in the film “Packed in a Trunk: The Lost Art of Edith Lake Wilkinson."

She spent extensive time in Provincetown from 1914 to 1923 as a member of the Provincetown Art Colony. She studied art with Charles Webster Hawthorne and Ambrose Webster, and was good friends with Blanche Lazzell. She also took up block printing, in particular a method known as the White-Line print, a technique started in 1915 by a group of artists who called themselves The Provincetown Printers. There are several white-line prints by Wilkinson that are signed and dated 1914, which pre-dates the earliest known prints by any of the others.

On February 15, 1922, Edith's elderly parents were overcome by gas fumes in their Wheeling, WV home. Edith's mother died from monoxide poisoning that day while her father was taken to a hospital and died the following day. Edith inherited an estate of approximately $35,000 (worth around $500,000 today) which was administered by local Wheeling attorney George J. Rogers.
While living in New York with her longtime female companion, Fannie Wilkinson of Augusta, Georgia, Edith received monthly checks from Rogers to cover her rent and daily living expenses. She had expressed an interest in moving back to Provincetown (an idea Rogers tried to discourage) and began studying French in anticipation of a possible trip to Paris.
On March 22, 1924, Edith was admitted to the Sheppard Pratt Institution, an asylum for the mentally ill in Baltimore, Maryland in what was described as a "paranoid state". She was released on October 2 that same year, her condition having sufficiently improved. However, just five months later, on February 10, 1925, she was readmitted to Sheppard & Pratt where she remained for the next ten years. All of Wilkinson's possessions, including most of her artwork, were packed into trunks and shipped to her nephew, Edward Vossler, in Wheeling.
In March 1935, Edith was transferred to Huntington State Hospital in West Virginia, still described as paranoid and now, at age 66, showing early signs of dementia. There she remained until her death on July 19, 1957. There is no evidence that she painted or did any artwork in the 30 years that she was institutionalized.

Wikipedia entry
Edith was an artist who lived for awhile in New York and Provincetown. She was committed to an asylum in 1925 and remained there until her death. Her work was found packed in boxes in the attic of a relative. A documentary film is being made about her life and work. There are several websites and a facebook page dedicated to Edith.
------------------
BORN: August 23, 1868 in Wheeling, West Virginia

FATHER: James P. Wilkinson, an accountant and paymaster. He fought in the Civil War on the Union side under the command of his father, Colonel Nathan Wilkinson in the West Virginia Loyal Volunteers. (Apparently James had two nervous breakdowns during his life but it’s reported that he recovered).

MOTHER: Lucy Lake Atkinson Wilkinson, born in Edinburgh, Scotland. She was an art teacher. In a wedding announcement for her daughter Jane, she was referred to as “a talented and well-known artist.”

SISTER: Jane Plumley Wilkinson Vossler, born 1875.
----
Edith was an artist who lived and painted in Provincetown, Massachusetts during the early decades of the 20th century until she was committed to an asylum for the mentally ill in 1924 Wilkinson's life and work is highlighted in the film “Packed in a Trunk: The Lost Art of Edith Lake Wilkinson."

She spent extensive time in Provincetown from 1914 to 1923 as a member of the Provincetown Art Colony. She studied art with Charles Webster Hawthorne and Ambrose Webster, and was good friends with Blanche Lazzell. She also took up block printing, in particular a method known as the White-Line print, a technique started in 1915 by a group of artists who called themselves The Provincetown Printers. There are several white-line prints by Wilkinson that are signed and dated 1914, which pre-dates the earliest known prints by any of the others.

On February 15, 1922, Edith's elderly parents were overcome by gas fumes in their Wheeling, WV home. Edith's mother died from monoxide poisoning that day while her father was taken to a hospital and died the following day. Edith inherited an estate of approximately $35,000 (worth around $500,000 today) which was administered by local Wheeling attorney George J. Rogers.
While living in New York with her longtime female companion, Fannie Wilkinson of Augusta, Georgia, Edith received monthly checks from Rogers to cover her rent and daily living expenses. She had expressed an interest in moving back to Provincetown (an idea Rogers tried to discourage) and began studying French in anticipation of a possible trip to Paris.
On March 22, 1924, Edith was admitted to the Sheppard Pratt Institution, an asylum for the mentally ill in Baltimore, Maryland in what was described as a "paranoid state". She was released on October 2 that same year, her condition having sufficiently improved. However, just five months later, on February 10, 1925, she was readmitted to Sheppard & Pratt where she remained for the next ten years. All of Wilkinson's possessions, including most of her artwork, were packed into trunks and shipped to her nephew, Edward Vossler, in Wheeling.
In March 1935, Edith was transferred to Huntington State Hospital in West Virginia, still described as paranoid and now, at age 66, showing early signs of dementia. There she remained until her death on July 19, 1957. There is no evidence that she painted or did any artwork in the 30 years that she was institutionalized.

Wikipedia entry