Still life with floral arrangement and black pottery , 1940
14.8 x 18.1 in (h x w)
Watercolor with graphite on paper; collection of Susan Elizabeth Gillin

Hatton often painted still life compositions using flowers from the garden that her mother tended at their home on 416 S. Grant Street in Old Town Fort Collins. The blue vase in the foreground may have been fired by Hatton herself, but the black-on-black pot behind it was made by Maximiliana “Ana” Martinez, a potter from San Ildefonso Pueblo who was the older sister of famed potter Maria Martinez. Hatton had a long-standing interest in Native American art: she taught Native American art (as well as Mesoamerican and Asian art) in her art history courses long before other art programs included non-Western art in their surveys, and in the 1950s, she invited Maria Martinez to Fort Collins as a visiting artist. The inscription on this watercolor indicates it was a gift to her great-niece, Susan Elizabeth Gillin, forty years after Hatton had painted it.

Plus de Gregory Allicar Museum of Art

Vanessa (blue robe) , 2013
23.5 x 30 in (h x w)
Photograph
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Self-portrait (mirror) , 2020
30 x 22.5 in (h x w)
Photograph
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Title unidentified (cavalry scene) , 18th century
9.5 x 12.3 in (h x w)
Oil on panel; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Larry Hartford and Torleif Tandstad, 2016.1.10
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Title unidentified (cavalry scene) , 18th century
9.5 x 12.3 in (h x w)
Oil on panel; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Larry Hartford and Torleif Tandstad, 2016.1.11
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Mimbres bowl, reassembled
12 x 12 x 6 in (h x w x d)
Ceramic; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, Gift of Teresa and Paul Harbaugh, 2016.12
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art