Self-Portrait

Object number86.1.70 a,b
Artist (1873 - 1967)
MediumOil on masonite; Wood; Paint
Credit LineGift of Western Pennsylvania Conservacy
DescriptionFramed oil painting. Portrait of an older woman who is holding a painting palette and brushes in her hands. She sits next to a painted support and looks up and out from the canvas at the viewer. Her back is reflected in a mirror which in turn reflects an image of her front in another mirror receeding into the background.Dimensions11.87 x 0.325 x 9 in. (30.1 x 0.8 x 22.9 cm)
SignedLower left corner with pink paint: LB Hetzel 1949-5
MarksLabel (typed) on reverse side: Titile: Me/ Price: $80.00/ Artist Lila B Hetzel
Historical NotesLila B. Hetzel was a well-known figure in the Pittsburgh art community throughout the twentieth century. Lila B. Hetzel, daughter of prominent Pittsburgh artist George Hetzel and Marie Louise Siegrist Hetzel, was born on October 23, 1873 in the Pittsburgh neighborhood of Edgewood. Against her father's wishes, she pursued an art career, studying at the Pittsburgh School of Design with Martin B. Leisser and D. B. Walkley. Eventually her father accepted her vocational choice, but due to his early refusal to teach her, she developed a painting style quite unlike his. In 1898, she moved with her parents and two brothers to a house near Somerset (Somerset County, Pa.) that became known as the Hetzel Studio. At that time, and in the years following, Somerset was developing into a summer art colony. She married William H. Kantner, a resident of Somerset, in 1904. This short-lived marriage produced one daughter, Dorothy Hetzel Kantner, born in 1906. After her separation from William Kantner, Lila returned with her daughter to Pittsburgh, where she established a studio in the Apollo Building on Fourth Avenue. She was a charter member and treasurer of the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh, founded in 1910. She supported herself and her young daughter solely by giving lessons and selling her work. At the outbreak of World War I, Lila and Dorothy returned to Somerset, where Lila reopened the Hetzel Studio. She gave private lessons and in 1939, she opened the Somerset Art School. Her work was exhibited at the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh Playhouse, the Arts and Crafts Center of Pittsburgh (now Pittsburgh Center for the Arts), Gillespie Galleries, Westmoreland County Museum of Art, and the Jennerstown Art Gallery. In her later years, Lila spent her winters in Pittsburgh and the remainder of the year in Somerset. Lila Hetzel died on June 4, 1967 in Somerset and is buried in Homewood Cemetery.
On View
Not on view
Show Girl of the Nineties
Lila B. Hetzel
1919
Mirror, Hand
1943-1946
In Grandmother's Garret
Lila B. Hetzel
1911-1911
Pilkington Technical Glass Company
1998
Badge Membership
J.K. Davison
1897
Jar
Phoenix Glass Company
Portrait of Mary Junkin Cowley
Ellis Meyer Silverberg
1916
Roller, Hair
Westinghouse
1960
Painting
Samuel Rosenberg
Plate, Dessert
Jackson China Incorporated
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