Background
Born in San Francisco in 1874, she was the daughter of Lyman H. Clement.
Born in San Francisco in 1874, she was the daughter of Lyman H. Clement.
She studied in New York City under Kenyon Cox.
Her studies began in that city with drawing from the antique and from life under Fred Yates. At the Cowles Art School, Boston, and the Art Students League of New York, she spent three winters, and at the Académie Julian, Paris, three other winters, drawing from life and painting in oils under the teaching of Jules Joseph Lefebvre and Tony Robert-Fleury, supplementing these studies by that of landscape in oils under Georges Laugée in Picardy. This artist received several awards from California State Fair exhibits, and her pastel portrait of her mother was hung on the line at the Paris Salon of 1898.
Her portraits, figure subjects, and landscapes are numerous, and are principally in private collections, a large proportion being in San Francisco.
Her later work included landscape painting in New England. In 1903, she exhibited a number of pictures in Boston which attracted favorable attention.
She was a Member of the San Francisco Art Association and of the Sketch Club of that city.