Thayer Waldo (married 1938)[4]
Robert DeLuce (spouse at time of death)[2][4]
Portrait of a Young Girl, 1929, by Grace Clements
Grace Richardson Clements (1905–1969)[3] was an American painter, mosaicist, and art critic. She was active as an artist in the 1920s, 1930s and early 1940s.[5]
Clements married journalist Thayer Waldo in 1938, and the couple moved to the Bay Area in the late 1940s.[1][4][13][14] In the 1940s, Clements stopped working as a painter and worked instead as an art critic.[9] She contributed to Arts and Architecture and Art Front magazines, and also did radio commentary including a weekly program on the Bay Area radio station KPFA.[7][14][15] Later in her life, Clements married astrologer Robert DeLuce and became involved in astrology herself.[1][4][9][16]
Jake Zeitlin's Book Shop, Los Angeles, California (solo, 1930)[4]
An Exhibition of Modern Paintings by Grace Clements, Los Angeles Museum of History, Science, and Art (predecessor to Los Angeles County Museum of Art) (solo, 1931)[17][19]
^ abcdefghiEhrlich, Susan, ed. (1994). Pacific Dreams: Currents of Surrealism and Fantasy in California Art, 1934–1957. Hammer Museum. pp. 94–95. ISBN0-943739-18-7.
^ abcdefghFort, Ilene Susan; Teresa Arcq; Terri Geis (2012). In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States. Prestel Publishing. ISBN978-3-7913-5141-4.
^St. Gaudens, Maurine (2015). Emerging From the Shadows: A Survey of Women Artists working in California, 1860-1960. Atglen, PA: Schiffer. p. 182. ISBN978-0-7643-4861-7.
^ abcFort, Ilene Susan. "The Adventuresome, the Eccentrics, and the Dreamers: Women Modernists of Southern California". In Patricia Trenton, ed. (1995). Independent Spirits: Women Painters of the American West, 1890–1945. University of California Press. pp. 94, 98, 101. ISBN0-520-20203-1.
^Susan Noyes Platt (1999). Art and politics in the 1930s: Modernism, Marxism, Americanism : a history of cultural activism during the Depression years. Midmarch Arts Press. p. 165. ISBN978-1-877675-28-7.
^Hinkey, Douglas M. (1991). Federal art in Long Beach : a heritage rediscovered. Long Beach, California: FHP Hippodrome Gallery. p. 15. ISBN0-9630584-0-1.