Pearl Van Sciver
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Pearl Jeanette Van Sciver, née Aiman (1896 – October 10, 1966), was a Philadelphia based artist, mostly of oil paintings of landscapes and floral still lifes often inspired by flowers from her own garden and greenhouse. She married Lloyd Van Sciver, the son of notable Camden, New Jersey–based furniture maker, J.B. Van Sciver.
Pearl was born in Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, in 1896, the only child of parents Arnold Aiman and Emma G. Rorer. Her father was a roofer and her mother had inherited property and money from her wealthy and heirless uncle, Clinton Rorer. Sometime before Pearl turned 4 years old, her parents moved just outside the city to Wyndmoor, in Springfield Township, Montgomery County.[1] Here she grew up in a large stone house which still stands today on East Willow Grove Ave. Her next door neighbors were the family of her mother's sister, the Fallows. The two families remained very close, Pearl was a bridesmaid at her cousin's wedding and reciprocated by asking the same cousin to be Matron of Honor at her own wedding.[2]
As a child, Pearl attended the Wyndmoor Public School, which is now the Wyndmoor Montessori School. Later, she became a graduate of Steven's School of Germantown, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Philadelphia Design for Women, now known as the Moore College of Art and Design.[2][3]
Marriage
On October 3, 1924, Pearl Aiman married Lloyd Van Sciver, a son of J.B. Van Sciver, owner of a successful furniture company, J.B. Van Sciver Co. Lloyd was a graduate of the Chestnut Hill Academy and School of Industrial Art (now the College of Art, Media and Design at the University of the Arts) and had also spent time in the military, having served overseas during World War I.[2] Sadly, Pearl's mother had not lived long enough to see her marry and had died in 1922.[4] The wedding took place at the Church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields in Chestnut Hill followed by a reception at the Philadelphia Cricket Club.[2]