Florence Riefle Bahr

Florence Riefle Bahr
Born
Florence Riefle

(1909-02-02)February 2, 1909
Baltimore, Maryland, US
DiedJanuary 12, 1998(1998-01-12) (aged 88)
Elkridge, Maryland, US
Alma materMaryland Institute College of Art (MICA)
Known forPainting, sketching, mixed media
SpouseLeonard Bahr
AwardsState of Maryland's Women's Hall of Fame (1999)

Florence Elizabeth Riefle Bahr (February 2, 1909 – January 12, 1998) was an American artist and activist. She made portraits of children and adults, including studies of nature as she found it. Instead of using a camera, more than 300 pen and ink sketchbooks catalog insights into her life, including her civil and human rights activism of the 1960s and 1970s. One of the many important captured events included the Washington D.C. event where Martin Luther King Jr. first gave his I Have a Dream speech. Her painting Homage to Martin Luther King hangs in the (NAACP) National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's headquarters. She created illustrations for children's books and painted a mural in the Works Progress Administration (WPA) for the Johns Hopkins Hospital's Harriet Lane Home for Children. Her works have been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions since the 1930s. In 1999, she was posthumously awarded to the State of Maryland's Women's Hall of Fame, as the first woman artist they recognized.