Background
Unsupported at home following the death of her mother when she was nine years old, she ran away from home at thirteen.
Unsupported at home following the death of her mother when she was nine years old, she ran away from home at thirteen.
By sixteen she was working as a domestic servant for a woman who recognized her talent and drive and paid to enroll her in the Chicago Art Institute. There she studies with Lorado Taft and by 1887 she had advanced to become his studio and teaching assistant. In 1893, during the Columbian Exposition she was one of several women sculptors nicknamed the White Rabbits who helped produce some of the architectural sculpture that graced the exposition buildings.
Aside from that she was awarded a commission to produce Illinois Welcoming the Nations for the Fair.
The work was later cast in bronze and unveiled at the Illinois State Capitol, at which time Governor Altgeld was the main speaker. In California she taught at the Otis Art Institute.
Wendt was a member of the National Sculpture Society and exhibited and was featured in both the 1923 and 1929 Exhibitions and the resulting catalogues.