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Bonnie MacLeary


Bonnie MacLeary (sometimes McLeary, which is how she signed her work) (January 2, 1902 – February 2, 1971) was an American sculptor. Some sources give her date of birth as 1890, 1892 or 1898.

MacLeary was born in San Antonio, Texas, the youngest of four children of James Harvey MacLeary and his wife, Mary; at six she began creating sculptures with clay from the banks of the San Antonio River. At her parents' divorce she was taken in by her grandparents, Valentine and Helen King, who took her to New York City in 1901. She began studies there with William Merritt Chase before traveling to Paris, where in 1903 she was studying with William Adolphe Bouguereau at the Académie Julien. She also studied miniature painting in Siena before returning to New York. There she began studies with James Earle Fraser at the Art Students League of New York in 1912, choosing to pursue her career as a sculptor. Around 1910 she met Ernest Kramer while visiting family in Waco, and soon thereafter they married; they would live in Dallas, St. Louis, and New Mexico over the next few years, and visited her family in Puerto Rico, where many of them had moved, many times. When Kramer went to fight in World War I, she established a studio in New York City.

The showing of two of her sculptures at the National Academy of Design in 1921 marked the beginning of MacLeary's career, and in 1924 her sculpture Aspiration was acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She suffered a studio fire in 1927, which destroyed many pieces; at some point during this time in her life she also divorced her husband. Nevertheless, she quickly recovered, and soon began winning prizes for her work. She became an associate member of the National Academy of Design in 1930; her diploma portrait in the collection is by Jerome Myers. Other organizations to which she belonged include the National Sculpture Society, the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, the Allied Artists of America, the American Artists Professional League, the Society of Medalists, and the Southern States Art League. During her career she would show at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the National Arts Club, among other places. From the 1940s she focused on ceramic work. She resettled in Washington, New Jersey in 1955. In 1964 she and her second husband, James McGahan, moved to Florida; she died at Lakeland General Hospital in Lakeland after a short illness. Her cremated remains were interred in Oakside Cemetery in Zephyrhills.


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