Background
Dinckel was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1890 (or 1891?), where he attended public schools.
Dinckel was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1890 (or 1891?), where he attended public schools.
He later studied at the Academy of Cincinnati under Frank Duveneck.
Most are oils, tempera, water paints, and gouache. He produced a large body of work during the 1930s through the 1970s. In 1920s, he studied art in Berlin, Munich, Rome and Paris.
Dinckel returned to Toledo, where he worked for the Outdoor Advertising Company, and then became the head of the art department for the Toledo branch of the First National Bank of Detroit.
In the late 1920s, he decided to devote full-time to his painting and left the field of design and commercial art He concentrated on portraits, landscapes, seascapes, and other marine topics.
During this time, he maintained a studio on Morin Point on the shore of Lake Erie. In 1942, they moved permanently to Rockport, Massachusetts.
Dinckel gave free painting demonstrations at his studio, the first artist in Rockport to do southern
He also taught painting classes. In the mid-1950s, Dinckel led a traveling "Foreign School of Painting" under the auspices of Intercollegiate Tours, Boston. Dinckel died at home in Rockport, Master of Arts, on 28 June 1976, at the age of 86.
He is buried in the Beech Grove Cemetery, Rockport, Master of Arts.
They lived in Toledo, where he was a member of the Tile Club 2, members of which, in 1901, hatched the idea of organizing an art museum in Toledo – which later became the Toledo Museum of Artist Dinckel was a member of several Art groups: the Rockport Art Association, Rockport, Master of Arts. The North Shore Art Association, Gloucester, Master of Arts.
The Salmagundi Art Association of New New York The Tile Club in Toledo, Ohio. The ArtKlan of Toledo, Ohio.
The Scarab Club in Detroit, Michigan and The Marblehead Art Association, Marblehead, Master of Arts.