Dorian Allworthy is an American representational, tonal-realist painter working in Chicago. She is also known for her drypointengravings. She specializes in large figure paintings as well as still life compositions and landscapes. Much like the French painterChardin, Dorian is noted for her genre paintings which depict domestic activities and children.
Biography
Early life and training
Dorian Allworthy was born in Pennsylvania. She attended an alternative high school in Pennsylvania on the main line of Philadelphia until the age of 16. She then began three years' study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts under Arthur DeCosta, where she was awarded the prestigious 'Thomas Eakins Award'. At age 19, she moved to Chicago to become a medical illustrator but soon realized that was not her calling. A year later she permanently moved in with her great uncle and adopted father, mid twentieth century painter, Joseph Allworthy, who referred to her as a "born painter", with the deal that 'she use his studio, and develop her career as an artist, under his watchful eye'.
Career
Paintings
Allworthy has established herself as a still life, figure and landscape painter. She has built a reputable portrait career as well. She takes great pride in painting from life, "I enjoy portraits... I wait and watch for a detail I like, something that is typical of them, like doing something nice with their hands..." something that makes her work unique and keeps true to her love and respect for the traditional style of painting and distinctive from modernphotographic realism. Her subjects include prominent figures in business, politics and academia. "...her landscapes always include an element ofhuman activity... such as an overturned wheel barrow... The significance of this observation leads the viewer to account for the missing activity at the time of creating the painting." "Like all of her paintings, strictly from life, she is compelled to remain captive to time, natural light...".
Print making
Dorian Allworthy is also a print maker, focusing on drypoint engravings and the chine-collé technique. A critic had this to say about her last show: