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Ada Walter Schulz (1870-1928) “Aunt Molly's House”

Ada W Shulz was born in Terre Haute,
Indiana in 1870. After the death of her father, her family moved to Indianapolis
where she attended Shortridge High School. Her art teacher, Roda Selleck,
inspired her to pursue art. Ada’s mother decided to move to Chicago
so Ada could pursue her art studies
at the Art Institute of Chicago with John Vanderpoel and Oliver Pennet
Grover. In 1892, she traveled with Vanderpoel's class to Delavan,
Wisconsin, where she met her future husband, artist Adolph Shulz. In
1894, she and Adolph traveled to Paris where she studied at the Vitti
Academy under Merson and Collin. In 1895, they moved to Germany and worked
in their own studios where Ada pursued figure studies, particularly children.
They moved back to Delavan after their son, Walter, was born. In 1900,
they had
read an article about Brown County in the Chicago newspaper. Adolph
traveled to Nashville and was so moved with the beauty and unspoiled
nature
that they began spending their summers painting in Brown County and began
spreading the word to other artists about establishing an art colony
there.
They moved permanently to Brown County in 1917 to live in their home/studio
on Cheerful Hill. Ada loved her gardens and the local people and became
famous for her paintings of mothers and children in sunlight. She was
especially fond of Mary “Grandma” Barnes, whose cabin, flower
gardens and
animals made a perfect setting for her portraits. They were charter members
of the Brown County Art Gallery Association. In 1926, Adolph left the
marriage for a younger artist, Alberta. Ada never fully recovered and
died
two years later.
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