EXTENSIVE FACTS TAKE TIME TO LOAD
Artingstall, Margaret
BORN: May 21, 1883ii Chicago
DIED: February 18, 1951 Chicago
MARRIED: Never
TRAINING
1902-1903 Graduated normal department, 1903-1905 graduated drawings and prints, Art Institute of Chicagoiii
1909, 1923, 1924 Art Institute of Chicago, evenings and summers
ART RELATED EMPLOYMENT
Designed textiles and wallpaperiv
TEACHING
1900s-1910s Teacher of deaf and dumb childrenv
1924-1951 Art Institute of Chicago, professor of designvi: 1924-1926 Junior department; 1927-1928 Perspective, evenings; 1927-1928 Object drawing, evenings; 1929-1932 Elementary design, evenings; 1931-1941, 1944-1946, 1950-1951 Industrial Art, 1931-1951 Design; 1932-1936 Industrial design, evenings; 1930-1948 Summers;
1938 Wesleyan Conservatory, Macon, GA
RESIDENCES
1901-1951 Chicagovii
1938 Macon, Georgia
TRAVEL
MEMBERSHIPS/OFFICES
Art Institute of Chicago (Life Member)
HONORS
1936 Honorary Master of Fine Arts, Art Institute of Chicago
SELECTED JURIES SERVED
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
Art Institute of Chicago, American Watercolors 1905
ONE, TWO OR THREE MAN EXHIBITIONS
PERMANENT COLLECTIONS
INTERESTING NOTES
Her father Samuel George Artingstall was a civil engineer and came from Manchester England arriving in Chicago in 1869. He was the assistant city engineer for Chicago Samuel’s name appears in The Book of Chicagoans, 1905. President of the Western Society of Engineers, he was put in charge and designed the general water system, including the pumping stations at Chicago Ave, Lake View, 22nd street and 14th street. He also instituted the first intercepting sewer system and the original river straightening at what is known as Goose Island. He proposed the creation of the Sanitary District of Chicago, later becoming chief engineer. He then became city engineer under Carter Harrison.viii
iObit., Chicago Tribune, 2/20/1951. Margaret’s parents were Samuel George Artingstall born 1845 at Salford England and Susan Archer born 1849. Samuel George moved to Chicago c.1868 and married Susan Archer in 1874. He later became
the City Engineer in Chicago. Information courtesy of Norma Hall who is researching the family.
iiBirth date taken from death certificate conflicts with other sources, we have used the oldest date.
iiiLetter to Margaret Artingstall from William M. R. French, French Letters, Ryerson Library, Art Institute of Chicago, 6/4/1903. In this letter she was appointed to teach in the Saturday class at the school of the Art Institute of Chicago which was an honor for senior students and carried with it a tuition waiver.
iv“Margaret Artingstall,” New York Times, obit., 2/20/1951, p.25.
vU. S. Census data.
viNorman Rice, “A Recollection,” Over a Century. A History of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago 1866-1981, (Chicago: The School of the Art Institute, 1982), p. 21. “The students... could no doubt produce a volume on the beneficent influence of this remarkable teacher. Too limited by arthritis to continue her own work, she channeled her design energies into the task of teaching others. She had impeccable design judgment, which she was able to impart with great skill.”
viiCensus data.
viiiInformation taken from his obituary from the Western Society of Engineers, courtesy of the artist’s great niece Alexandra Pena.