Eda Nemoede Casterton
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April 14, 1877
Eda Nemoede Casterton | |
|---|---|
| Born | Eda Nemoede April 14, 1877 |
| Died | November 15, 1969 (aged 92) |
| Education | School of the Art Institute of Chicago |
| Known for | Painting |
Eda Nemoede Casterton (April 14, 1877 – November 15, 1969) was an American painter known specifically for her portrait miniatures in watercolor, pastels and oil. She exhibited works at the Paris Salon and the San Francisco Panama–Pacific International Exposition of 1915, among others. Her works are at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Brooklyn Museum.
Eda Wilhelmina Nemoede was born in Brillion, Wisconsin, on April 14, 1877[1] to Edward Carl Ludwig Nemoede, a harnessmaker, and Maria Georgina Bastian[2] of German ancestry.[3] They had 11 children, eight of whom reached adulthood.[4] Her siblings were Bertha, 16 years her senior; Agnes; Rudolph; Anna; Hattie; Herman;[2] and Alma Caroline.[5]
Against the wishes of her teacher and family, she painted on the walls of her schoolhouse as a young girl. She wanted to become an artist. According to her parents wishes, she studied to become a stenographer[6] and then worked for attorney Peter Martineau as a secretary.[3][7] Following the death of her father March 6, 1895, in Oconto, Wisconsin, Casterton lived in Chicago with her mother and her sisters Hattie and Alma Caroline and worked as a stenographer.[5]
Education


Nemoede studied at the Minnesota[10] or Minneapolis School of Fine Arts.[11] When she worked as a stenographer, she spent her lunch hours at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago,[3][6] where she studied with Virginia Richmond Reynolds, considered the most accomplished miniature American painter of the time.[12] Of painting miniatures, Casterton said that they were "small paintings painted in a big way."[3]
After she began working as an artist,[3] she took more classes and completed commissioned works of art with her teacher.[6] In France, Casterton studied with Henry Salem Hubbell[3][12] and exhibited her works at the Paris Salon, where she received an honorable mention in 1905.[3][9]

