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Ruth Van Sickle Ford was nothing if not an original. Born August 8, 1897 to Anna
Miller, a German immigrant, and Charles P. Van Sickle, of Dutch heritage, Ruth
was an only child and grew up on the west side of Aurora, Illinois. She
attended Mary A. Todd Grade School and West Aurora High School, graduating in
1915. Her parents owned a restaurant, called The Rookery, located downtown near
the railroad tracks, where railroad workers often came to eat. But Anna Van
Sickle was an amateur painter, and she recognized something special in their
talented daughter. Immediately following high school they enrolled Ruth in the
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, where she studied under Carl Newland Werntz from
1915-1918.
The same year she graduated from the Academy, Ruth married Albert (Sam) Ford, a
civil engineer, in a military ceremony in Houston, Texas, after which he
departed for service in the First World War. In 1918, undaunted by pregnancy
and the absence of her husband, Ruth traveled across the country to visit a
relative in Utah, giving birth while on that trip to their only child, Barbara.
With the return of world peace, Ruth and Sam settled down in Aurora and Ruth,
hardly a typical young wife and mother, continued to study and to paint, and
also worked as a commercial illustrator. Recognition as an artist came to her
early, and she was chosen to exhibit in the 1921 American Show at the Art
Institute of Chicago. Later in life, she was always quick to credit her
teachers, especially George Bellows who influenced her with his social realism,
and John Carlson, who founded the School of Landscape Painting in Woodstock,
New York.
As a businesswoman, Ruth again showed her originality. A forerunner of today's
commuter, she would take the train from Aurora every morning at 6 a.m.,
returning home at 10 p.m.. Although her training was in art, she possessed the
necessary financial savvy and marketing and management skills to operate an
important art school, which was for many years located on the 12th floor of 18
South Michigan Avenue. She wrote at length about her theories of art education,
revealing much about her own self when she stated that an art school graduate
"should certainly be able to forge ahead with confidence, enthusiasm and a
business-like application of his art training."
She had a lifelong concern for the affordability of art and art education. When
one of her students, the young Bill Mauldin, who would go on to become a
legendary political cartoonist, told her he couldn't afford a full course of
study at her school, she arranged for him to get the classes he needed the
most, such as anatomy and life drawing, before his money ran out. Throughout
her career, she paid close attention to her fees and the price tags on her own
paintings, believing strongly that the best art and art teachers are not always
the most expensive. She was determined to do her part to make sure that people
who loved art and truly wanted to learn would be able to do so.
Using both her maiden and married names was highly unusual for the times,
although Ruth shrugged off the notion that she was proving a feminist point.
'There was a stripteaser named Ruth Ford on Ohio Street," she once explained.
"I used to get the damndest letters about the nice time [men] had the night
before." However, she did have a liberal view of society structured, no doubt,
by the support she always received from her own family. She said that "if a
woman has the desire to do something, she should do it."
Of her four grandchildren, two showed an interest in the fine arts and have
dabbled in painting and metal arts. Ruth and Sam embarked together on a bold
project in 1949. With the architect Bruce Goff, an instructor at the Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts, they designed a home for themselves at 404 South Edgelawn
Avenue on Aurora's west side. Called variously the Round House, the Coal House,
the Umbrella House or the Mushroom House, it astounded locals and visitors
alike with its balloon-like structure, walls made of coal and chunks of colored
glass, and open interior spaces. It was said to be modeled after a Tibetan
nomad tent, but it might as well have been a flying saucer mysteriously landed
in Aurora. Curiosity-seekers drove by constantly to gawk or even peek into
windows. One especially bold group surprised Ruth as she exited from a bath
clad only in a bathrobe. Never at a loss for a quip, Ruth opened the door and
asked "Would you ladies like to take a bath, too?"
The Fords eventually put up a sign on their front lawn saying "We don't like
your house either,” but the unrelenting attention wearied them, and in 1961, as they approached
retirement age, they sold both the house and the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
They moved to a conventional ranch house a few blocks away at 69 South Central
Avenue and Ruth turned her attention to teaching in her home town. She taught
classes at the YMCA and then at Aurora College, now Aurora University, from
1964-1973. The college awarded her an honorary doctorate in 1974.
As a teacher, she employed a brutal directness sometimes enhanced with sarcasm,
but her students, now mostly adults and established artists, seemed able to
take that in stride. It must have been a reasonable price to pay for the wisdom
and critical eye of such a successful artist.
Successful she was. She could boast membership in the American Watercolour
Society, the Palette and Chisel Academy (where she was the first woman member),
the American Artist Professional League, the Chicago Painters and Sculptors
Association, the National Association of Women Artists, the Philadelphia Water
Color Club and the Chicago Society of Artists, Inc., as well as others. She
exhibited her work throughout the United States and the Caribbean islands,
garnering numerous awards, including some very prestigious gold and silver
medals. Her watercolors and oils are to be found in many museums and private
collections, including the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Her
biography appears in several
Who's Who publications.
Ruth Van Sickle Ford died April 18, 1989, leaving as a legacy the hundreds of
artists across the nation whom she trained, and a large oeuvre of work.
Numerous Fords can be found in the Fox Valley, notably at the Aurora Public
Library, Aurora University, Plum Landing, and the Old Second National Bank of
Aurora.
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