Wilber Moore Stilwell was an artist, educator, author and inventor. In addition to his prolific career as a painter, he and his wife, Gladys Ferree Stilwell, passionately contributed to the field of art education, collaboratively writing articles, organizing exhibitions, and patenting new inventions.
Wilber Moore Stilwell was born in Covington, Indiana, in 1908. He grew up in Emporia, Kansas, where his father was an attorney. Stilwell attended the Kansas City Art Institute from 1929 to 1933, and his creative talents were immediately recognized. In addition to teaching junior drawing classes, he was chosen to paint a mural for the Lindberg Theatre, and won multiple prizes from the Missouri State Fair and Midwestern Artists' Exhibitions. He soon married Gladys Louise Ferree, an artist also from Emporia, Kansas.
After graduating, Stilwell returned to Emporia for two years and taught private art lessons. In 1934, he completed a large mural series with artist Isabel Schreiber at the University of Kansas's Dyche Natural History Museum. Their dioramas illustrated prehistoric life in Kansas. From 1935-1939, Stilwell worked as Registrar at the Kansas City Art Institute and established an annual scholarship competition. In 1938, he was listed in Who's Who In American Art.
In 1940, Stilwell earned a bachelor's of science degree in education at the Kansas State Teachers College in Hays, then completed his master's of fine arts degree at the University of Iowa. He would soon begin a thirty-year career at the University of South Dakota as chair of the new art department, expanding the curriculum and organizing the local art community.
Wilber Moore Stilwell and Gladys Ferree Stilwell collaboratively wrote about art education and published many articles outlining their ideas. They invented new craft methods for children and patented a design for some of the first child-safety scissors. The couple received an award from the American Artists Professional League for books they jointly published in 1962, 1963, 1964, and 1965. In 1962, the couple received an award from the American Artists Professional League for a book they jointly published.
In 1966, Wilber Moore Stilwell was awarded the National Gallery of Art Medal for Distinguished Service to Education. The same year, he received a gold medal for Distinguished Service to American Art from the American Artists' Professional League. He was listed continuously in Who's Who in America during his career. Stilwell died unexpectedly in 1974 while visiting family in Kansas City. After his death, Gladys Ferree Stilwell established The Stilwell Annual Student Awards Exhibition at the University of South Dakota, where it is still held annually. The university mounted two large retrospectives of Stilwell's work in 2001 and 2009, and holds an extensive collection of his work, notes and inventions.
Mary Stilwell Van Loan, Joan Stilwell Cremer, and Elizabeth Stilwell Brechtel are the
daughters of Wilber and Gladys Stilwell. They donated a significant collection of material to the University of South Dakota Special Archives, and they contributed information for the Missouri Remembers portal through correspondence with project staff.
Organized by Country Club Plaza
Organized by Missouri State Fair Commission
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Women's City Club
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Tulsa Free Fair Association
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by University of Iowa
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by National Gallery of Art
Organized by University of South Dakota
Organized by Country Club Plaza
Organized by Missouri State Fair Commission
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Women's City Club
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Tulsa Free Fair Association
Organized by Kansas City Art Institute
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by University of Iowa
Organized by Kansas State Fair Association
Organized by Central Kansas Fair Association
Organized by National Gallery of Art
Organized by University of South Dakota
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Artist clippings file is available at:
Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
Mary Stilwell Van Loan, "reply:Gladys Ferree Stilwell, artist," e-mail message to Elinore Noyes, February 17, 2022.
"Biographical/Historical," Collection Overview of the Wilber M. Stilwell Papers, University of South Dakota Archives and Special Collections, Vermillion, South Dakota, https://archives.usd.edu/repositories/2/resources/99.
Hanna DeLange, "Stilwell Student Exhibition to Showcase Student Art," University of South Dakota News, December 22, 2020, https://www.usd.edu/news/2020/stilwell-student-exhibition-to-showcase-student-art.
"Wilber and Gladys Stilwell," Stilwell Student Awards Exhibition, February 21, 2020, https://apps.usd.edu/administrative/flip/stilwell-student-awards-exhibition-2020/18/.
Sarah A. Hanson-Pareek, "Stilwell blottergraph printing; creating the experience of lithography with wax crayon, watercolor and blotters," Archives and Special Collections Blog, University Libraries, University of South Dakota, February 27, 2015, https://archivesandspecialcollections.wordpress.com/2015/02/27/stilwell-blottergraph-printing-creating-the-experience-of-lithography-with-wax-crayon-water-color-and-blotters/.
Lea Rosson DeLong, "Wilber Moore Stilwell" (Vermillion: University of South Dakota, 2013).
"Gladys Louise Ferree Stilwell," Kansas City Star, October 29, 2003.
"Wilber Stilwell, Educator, Artist, Dies at Area Home," Kansas City Star, March 10, 1974.
Wilber and Gladys Stilwell, 1952, Child Safety Scissors, US Patent 2,591,740, filed February 3, 1950, and issued April 8, 1952.
"Awards for Art Study," Kansas City Times, May 6, 1937.
"New Art Institute Registrar Draws and Paints Wild Animals as Pastime," Kansas City Times, September 13, 1935.
"Queer and Terrifying Denizens of Kansas in Prehistoric Ages Depicted in Murals Painted for the Dyche Museum of Natural History at K.U.," Kansas City Star, July 29, 1934.
Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).
askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.
Wilber Moore Stilwell, Head of a Tiger, 1939
Charcoal, 12 x 18 in.
Included in Lea Rosson DeLong, "Wilber Moore Stilwell" (Vermillion: University of South Dakota, 2013), 80.
Wilber Moore Stilwell, Utah Canyon, Grey Sky, 1936
Watercolor, 13 3/4 x 10 1/4 in.
Included in Lea Rosson DeLong, "Wilber Moore Stilwell" (Vermillion: University of South Dakota, 2013), 85.
Unknown, Portrait of Wilber Moore Stilwell, 1937
Photograph.
Included in Lea Rosson DeLong, "Wilber Moore Stilwell" (Vermillion: University of South Dakota, 2013), title page.
Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute
Artist record updated on March 14, 2022
Published on December 10, 2021
Updated on March 14, 2022
Artist clippings file is available at:
Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
Mary Stilwell Van Loan, "reply:Gladys Ferree Stilwell, artist," e-mail message to Elinore Noyes, February 17, 2022.
"Biographical/Historical," Collection Overview of the Wilber M. Stilwell Papers, University of South Dakota Archives and Special Collections, Vermillion, South Dakota, https://archives.usd.edu/repositories/2/resources/99.
Hanna DeLange, "Stilwell Student Exhibition to Showcase Student Art," University of South Dakota News, December 22, 2020, https://www.usd.edu/news/2020/stilwell-student-exhibition-to-showcase-student-art.
"Wilber and Gladys Stilwell," Stilwell Student Awards Exhibition, February 21, 2020, https://apps.usd.edu/administrative/flip/stilwell-student-awards-exhibition-2020/18/.
Sarah A. Hanson-Pareek, "Stilwell blottergraph printing; creating the experience of lithography with wax crayon, watercolor and blotters," Archives and Special Collections Blog, University Libraries, University of South Dakota, February 27, 2015, https://archivesandspecialcollections.wordpress.com/2015/02/27/stilwell-blottergraph-printing-creating-the-experience-of-lithography-with-wax-crayon-water-color-and-blotters/.
Lea Rosson DeLong, "Wilber Moore Stilwell" (Vermillion: University of South Dakota, 2013).
"Gladys Louise Ferree Stilwell," Kansas City Star, October 29, 2003.
"Wilber Stilwell, Educator, Artist, Dies at Area Home," Kansas City Star, March 10, 1974.
Wilber and Gladys Stilwell, 1952, Child Safety Scissors, US Patent 2,591,740, filed February 3, 1950, and issued April 8, 1952.
"Awards for Art Study," Kansas City Times, May 6, 1937.
"New Art Institute Registrar Draws and Paints Wild Animals as Pastime," Kansas City Times, September 13, 1935.
"Queer and Terrifying Denizens of Kansas in Prehistoric Ages Depicted in Murals Painted for the Dyche Museum of Natural History at K.U.," Kansas City Star, July 29, 1934.
Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).
askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.
Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute
Published on December 10, 2021
Updated on March 14, 2022
Noyes, Elinore. "Wilber Moore Stilwell." In Missouri Remembers: Artists in Missouri through 1951. Kansas City: The Kansas City Art Institute and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; St. Louis: The St. Louis Public Library, 2021, https://doi.org/10.37764/5776.