Ruth Powers Ortlieb
1893 - 1982
A member of the San Diego Art Guild, she frequently exhibited throughout the state in the 1930s and early 1940s, and received several important awards for her work. By nature more progressive in her approach to painting, Ruth helped form the group calling themselves the San Diego Modems in the early 1930s. One of her paintings, a still-life owned by Clarence Hinkle, was exhibited at the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935. Everett Gee Jackson, as chairman of the Art Department at San Diego State College, hired Ruth to teach beginning design in 1936, and remembers her as a progressive and intelligent individual. She left San Diego in the early 1940s, receiving her M.A. degree from Claremont College in 1942. She was a student of Millard Sheets and an active member of the San Diego art community.
Biographical information:
Interview with Robert Ortlieb, 1990.
Biography courtesy of California Watercolors 1850-1970,
©2002 Hillcrest Press, Inc.
& The Journal of San Diego History
Courtesy of CaliforniaWatercolor.com
Person TypeIndividual