1873 -1945
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BORN
August 31, 1873
Weston, Missouri
DIED
August 27, 1945
Boulder, Colorado
EDUCATION
GENDER
RACE / ETHNICITY
OCCUPATION
Editor
Author
Faculty
Teacher

Floy Campbell was born in Weston, Missouri, on August 31, 1873. Her father, Milton Campbell, was a lawyer, and his status gave her access to a well-rounded education. After graduating from Central High School in Kansas City, she attended Columbia University in New York and the Kansas City Art Association and School of Design in the early 1890s. In 1893, she went abroad to study at the Académie Colarossi in Paris. While there, her instructors included Eduardo Leon Garrido, Charles Cottett and Lucien Simon. She also studied with the Art Students League of New York.

Upon returning to Kansas City in 1896, Floy Campbell took a position teaching art at the Manual Training High School. At the same time, Campbell opened her own studio in room 317 of the Lyceum Building, located at 104 W. 9th St. She belonged to several arts organizations in her career, including the Kansas City Society of Artists, the Kansas City Paint Club, Society of Women Artists in Paris, Boulder Artists Guild, and the Kansas City Art Club, for which she was secretary.

After living, working and actively exhibiting in Kansas City for seventeen years, Campbell moved to Puerto Rico in 1913 to teach art at the University of Puerto Rico, eventually becoming head of the program. In 1920, Campbell moved back to Kansas City and became the head of the Art Department at the Kansas City Junior College. For the next fifteen years she contributed her work to artist exhibitions, participated in local groups, and continued writing, teaching and painting. Campbell retired from her teaching career in 1935 and moved to Boulder, Colorado, where she continued to work as an artist until her death in 1945. She named the Kansas City Art Institute the beneficiary of her $40,000 estate, which now exists as an endowed scholarship.

Floy Campbell was an accomplished painter, illustrator and printmaker. Influenced by her study of French Impressionism and European Expressionism, Campbell used fluid, colorful brushstrokes to capture life around her. Her subject matter included landscapes, still lifes and portraits. She painted an official portrait of her sister, Cora Campbell, principal of the Bancroft School in Kansas City, to be hung in its auditorium. She contributed a portrait of Rev. Dr. A. B. Brown, a professor of Washington & Jefferson College, where her father attended in the 1850s.

Campbell exhibited her work in Paris, New York, Boulder and Los Angeles. She mounted several solo exhibitions throughout her career at esteemed galleries and her own studio. She also contributed work to group exhibitions with the Kansas City Paint Club, the Gertrude Woolf Lighton Studio, the Findlay Gallery and the Kansas City Art Institute. Alongside her study of painting, Campbell was a skilled illustrator and printmaker, creating drawings and prints for newspapers, magazines and books.

Floy Campbell was a prolific writer. She wrote extensively about art historical subjects, ranging from Modern Expressionism to Ancient Symbolism. She delivered several art history lectures at the Kansas City Art Institute during the 1920s. She published her ideas about art and education in magazines such as The School Arts Magazine and newspapers like the Kansas City Star.

Her writing was a form of self-expression as well as a mode of academic study. In 1900, she published Camp Arcady, a novel about a young woman studying art in New York alongside three other women: Raphaelina, a painter, St. Cecilia, a musician, and Sarah Siddons, an actress. The account draws directly from her experience at the Art Students League of New York and offers unique insight into the lives of women artists during the 1890s. She also published poetry in various literary magazines, using rich, painterly imagery to reflect on nature and philosophy.

Floy Campbell's love for art also found expression in her career as an educator. In an article titled "The Collecting Instinct in Art Education," Campbell outlined a series of projects designed to encourage students to interact thoughtfully with local art exhibits by creating their own handmade booklets using newspaper and magazine clippings. Campbell believed serious engagement with art was a social necessity. During her time teaching at the Manual Training High School, Campbell helped talented students who lacked means to get work-study jobs at the Kansas City Art Institute in order to pay for their education.

Campbell passionately advocated for the value of art and the need to financially support artists. Throughout her work as an artist, writer and teacher, she strove to cultivate "a public that is convinced of the value of art as a public asset, and that has a lively personal concern about all artistic movements in the city" (Campbell, "The Collecting Instinct," 512).

Note

Floy Campbell's birth date has been reported as August 31, 1873, and also September 30, 1878. AskArt database claims the former is correct and supported by genealogical records. However, the latter date has also been reported by several newspaper articles and is recorded on a passport application by Campbell from 1914.

Relationships9

Other Artists Associated with
George Van Millet: Associate

HeadshotPersonDatesActions

Edith Whitehead Sheridan

1867 - 1955
Kansas City
circa 1890-circa 1900
F

Roland Charles Thomas

1883 - 1951
Kansas City
1916-1940s
St. Joseph
1940s-1951
M

Helene DeLaunay

1858 - 1932
Kansas City
1888-1910
West Prairie
1910-1920
Liberty
1931
F

William Weber

1865 - 1905
Kansas City
1890-1905
M

Elmer Boyd Smith

1860 - 1943
Kansas City
1880s-1900s
M

Other Artists Associated with
Gertrude Woolf Lighton: Associate

HeadshotPersonDatesActions

Ivan Ganser

1906 - 1973
Kansas City
1929-1970
M

Coah Henry

1876 - 1962
Independence
1902-1910
Kansas City
1910-1962
F

Emmett Junius Craig

1878 - 1939
Kansas City
1910-1939
M

Letha Churchill Walker

1892 - 1968
Kansas City
1914-1940
F

Naomi Williams Heller

1895 - 1988
Kansas City
1920-1988
F

Other Artists Associated with
Lucien Simon: Teacher

HeadshotPersonDatesActions

Henry Varnum Poor

1887 - 1970
Kansas City
1896-1905
M

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri

Bibliography

Select Sources

"Kansas City Art Institute Inherits $40,000 From Campbell Sisters," The Boulder Daily Camera, April 29, 1949.

"A Love For Art Goes On," Kansas City Star, April 25, 1949.

"Miss Floy Campbell has opened a studio at room 317, Lyceum Building," Kansas City Journal, September 26, 1896, https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063624/1896-09-26/ed-1/seq-8/.

Karl Marxhausen, "Lighton's Community," 1718 Holly Street, February 15, 2013, https://kansas-city-society-of-artists.blogspot.com/2013/02/lightons-community.html.

Floy Campbell, "The Collecting Instinct in Art Education," The School Arts Magazine 12, No. 8 (April 1913): 512-515, https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=Q4IVAAAAIAAJ&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA512.

Floy Campbell, Camp Arcady: The story of four girls and some others, who "kept house" in a New York "flat" (Boston: R.G. Badger & Co., 1900), https://archive.org/details/camparcadystoryo00campiala/mode/2up.


Core Reference Sources

Kansas City Art Institute, "Midwestern Artists' Exhibition," https://archive.org/details/@jannes_library_kansas_city_art_institute?and[]=subject%3A%22Midwestern+Artists%27+Exhibition%22.

Mazee Bush Owens and Frances S. Bush, A History of Community Achievement: 1885-1964 (Kansas City: Kansas City Art Institute and School of Design, 1965),

https://archive.org/details/OwensMazeeBushCommunityAchievement/mode/2up

Mantle Fielding, Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers (Poughkeepsie: Apollo, 1983).

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Contributors

Lora Farrell, Kansas City Art Institute

Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute

Artist Record Published

Published on September 20, 2021

Learn more

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri

Artist’s work in these institutions’ collections

Kansas City Art Institute

Bibliography

Select Sources

"Kansas City Art Institute Inherits $40,000 From Campbell Sisters," The Boulder Daily Camera, April 29, 1949.

"A Love For Art Goes On," Kansas City Star, April 25, 1949.

"Miss Floy Campbell has opened a studio at room 317, Lyceum Building," Kansas City Journal, September 26, 1896, https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063624/1896-09-26/ed-1/seq-8/.

Karl Marxhausen, "Lighton's Community," 1718 Holly Street, February 15, 2013, https://kansas-city-society-of-artists.blogspot.com/2013/02/lightons-community.html.

Floy Campbell, "The Collecting Instinct in Art Education," The School Arts Magazine 12, No. 8 (April 1913): 512-515, https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=Q4IVAAAAIAAJ&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA512.

Floy Campbell, Camp Arcady: The story of four girls and some others, who "kept house" in a New York "flat" (Boston: R.G. Badger & Co., 1900), https://archive.org/details/camparcadystoryo00campiala/mode/2up.


Core Reference Sources

Kansas City Art Institute, "Midwestern Artists' Exhibition," https://archive.org/details/@jannes_library_kansas_city_art_institute?and[]=subject%3A%22Midwestern+Artists%27+Exhibition%22.

Mazee Bush Owens and Frances S. Bush, A History of Community Achievement: 1885-1964 (Kansas City: Kansas City Art Institute and School of Design, 1965),

https://archive.org/details/OwensMazeeBushCommunityAchievement/mode/2up

Mantle Fielding, Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers (Poughkeepsie: Apollo, 1983).

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Contributors

Lora Farrell, Kansas City Art Institute

Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute

Artist Record Published

Published on September 20, 2021

Updated on None

Citation

Noyes, Elinore and Lora Farrell. "Floy Campbell." 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.