{
    "data": {
        "id": 123716,
        "accession_number": "1944.245",
        "share_license_status": "Copyrighted",
        "tombstone": "Last Snow, 1944. Thelma Frazier Winter (American, 1908\u20131977). Watercolor. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Silver Jubilee Treasure Fund, 1944.245",
        "current_location": null,
        "title": "Last Snow",
        "creation_date": "1944",
        "creation_date_earliest": 1944,
        "creation_date_latest": 1944,
        "artists_tags": [
            "May Show",
            "female",
            "Cleveland Institute of Art (alumni)"
        ],
        "culture": [
            "America, Ohio, Cleveland"
        ],
        "technique": "watercolor",
        "support_materials": [],
        "department": "Drawings",
        "collection": "DR - American - Cleveland School",
        "type": "Drawing",
        "dimensions": {},
        "state_of_the_work": null,
        "edition_of_the_work": null,
        "copyright": null,
        "inscriptions": [],
        "exhibitions": {
            "current": [
                {
                    "id": 382036,
                    "title": "The May Show: 26th Annual Exhibition of Works by Cleveland Artists and Craftsmen",
                    "description": "<i>The May Show: 26th Annual Exhibition of Works by Cleveland Artists and Craftsmen</i>. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (organizer) (May 2-June 11, 1944).",
                    "opening_date": "1944-05-02T04:00:00"
                },
                {
                    "id": 705520,
                    "title": "Work of Cleveland Artists for the 41st Annual Meeting of the College Art Association",
                    "description": "<i>Work of Cleveland Artists for the 41st Annual Meeting of the College Art Association</i>. The Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland, OH (organizer) (January 29-31, 1953).",
                    "opening_date": "1953-01-29T05:00:00"
                }
            ],
            "legacy": []
        },
        "provenance": [],
        "find_spot": null,
        "related_works": [],
        "former_accession_numbers": [],
        "did_you_know": null,
        "description": null,
        "external_resources": {
            "wikidata": [
                "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q79901041"
            ],
            "internet_archive": []
        },
        "citations": [
            {
                "citation": "Thelma Frazier Winter Entry Card to 1944 May Show. Cleveland Museum of Art May Show Records, Cleveland Museum of Art Archives.",
                "page_number": null,
                "url": "https://archive.org/details/CMAMS07014/"
            }
        ],
        "url": "https://clevelandart.org/art/1944.245",
        "images": {},
        "alternate_images": [],
        "creditline": "Silver Jubilee Treasure Fund",
        "image_credit": null,
        "sketchfab_id": null,
        "sketchfab_url": null,
        "gallery_donor_text": null,
        "athena_id": 123716,
        "creators": [
            {
                "id": 4573,
                "description": "Thelma Frazier Winter (American, 1908\u20131977)",
                "extent": null,
                "qualifier": null,
                "role": "artist",
                "biography": "Frazier grew up in New Philadelphia, Ohio, and studied ceramics with Julius Mihalik at the Cleveland School of Art, graduating in 1929. In the late 1920s she and sculptor Waylande Gregory worked at Cowan Pottery as the firm\u2019s principal artists. She first exhibited in the 1934 May Show at the Cleveland Museum of Art, and continued to do so until 1949. She showed in the annual National Ceramic exhibitions in Syracuse, New York (1935\u201358), where in 1939 she became the first woman to win a first place award. After a post graduate study in art education at Western Reserve University in Cleveland and Ohio State University, she began teaching in Cleveland public schools. In 1939 the Little Gallery of Cleveland College mounted an exhibition of her works. That year she married the enamelist Edward Winter, whom she had met at Cowan Pottery. She continued to paint and work with clay until the late 1950s, garnering several large-scale ceramic commissions from churches and schools. In 1958, under her husband\u2019s influence, Winter took up enameling, and collaborated with him on a number of enamel mural commissions in the 1960s and 1970s. <br><em>Transformations in Cleveland Art.</em> (CMA, 1996), p. 241<br>Biographical information exists in the Cleveland Museum of Art Archives.",
                "name_in_original_language": null,
                "birth_year": "1908",
                "death_year": "1977",
                "use_in_caption": true,
                "include_extent": false,
                "weight": 1
            }
        ],
        "legal_status": "accessioned",
        "accession_date": "1944-05-01T00:00:00",
        "sortable_date": 1944,
        "date_added_to_oa": null,
        "date_text": "1944",
        "collapse_artists": false,
        "on_loan": false,
        "recently_acquired": false,
        "record_type": "object",
        "conservation_statement": null,
        "has_conservation_images": false,
        "cover_accession_number": null,
        "is_nazi_era_provenance": false,
        "impression": null,
        "alternate_titles": [],
        "is_highlight": false,
        "updated_at": "2026-03-27 00:02:22.509000"
    }
}